Morales Danielle X, Grineski Sara E, Collins Timothy W
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Texas at El Paso, 500 W. University Ave., El Paso, TX 79968.
Department of Sociology, University of Utah, 480 S 1530 E; Salt Lake City, UT 84112.
Br J Sociol Educ. 2019;40(8):1121-1137. doi: 10.1080/01425692.2019.1646115. Epub 2019 Aug 6.
We examine separate and combined effects of children's body size and gender on school bullying victimization in the US. Second-grade data from the 2012-2013 school year from the US Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Kindergarten Class of 2011 were analyzed, hierarchical generalized logistic modeling was used, and three forms of school bullying were studied. Girls were less likely than boys to be verbally or physically bullied and obese children were more likely to be verbally and relationally bullied than non-obese children. The protective effect of gender extends to obese girls when obesity is not a risk factor (physical bullying). When obesity is a risk factor, gender is not protective (verbal bullying) or is a risk factor (relational bullying) for girls. These findings suggest an intersectional body size-gender lens is crucial to understanding how inequality is produced through school bullying. Future interventions should incorporate an intersectional understanding of school bullying.
我们研究了美国儿童的体型和性别对校园欺凌受害情况的单独影响和综合影响。分析了来自美国2011年幼儿园班的2012 - 2013学年二年级数据,使用了分层广义逻辑模型,并研究了三种校园欺凌形式。女孩比男孩遭受言语或身体欺凌的可能性更小,肥胖儿童比非肥胖儿童遭受言语和关系欺凌的可能性更大。当肥胖不是风险因素(身体欺凌)时,性别的保护作用延伸至肥胖女孩。当肥胖是风险因素时,性别对女孩没有保护作用(言语欺凌)或成为风险因素(关系欺凌)。这些发现表明,交叉的体型 - 性别视角对于理解不平等如何通过校园欺凌产生至关重要。未来的干预措施应纳入对校园欺凌的交叉理解。