University of Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2022 Jun;37(11-12):NP8747-NP8766. doi: 10.1177/0886260520978199. Epub 2020 Dec 10.
Sexual and gender minority youth (SGMY) are more likely to experience bullying and violence compared to the youth who do not identify as SGMY, leading to increased risk of poor mental and physical health outcomes, and poor academic performance. Few studies explore the entire range of bullying experienced by sexual and gender minority youth (SGMY). The purpose of this study was to qualitatively describe the ways in which SGMY experience bullying victimization. We conducted semi-structured interviews with a diverse sample of 20 SGMY aged 14-18 years (median age 16 years) recruited from online social media. The sample included 10 participants who identified as cisgender girls, 4 who identified as cisgender boys, 2 who identified as transgender, and 4 who identified as another gender identity. Ten participants identified as bisexual, six identified as lesbian, and four identified as gay. Findings indicated six common experiences of bullying among the participants: (a) verbal harassment; (b) gender policing; (c) physical violence; (d) sexual harassment; (e) treated as sexual perpetrators and deviants; and (f) and social exclusion. SGMY described how bullying victimization ranged from overt to concealed attitudes and behaviors, and they articulated how several forms of bullying are likely not experienced by heterosexual and cisgender youth. These results support findings from prior qualitative studies and suggest that efforts to address school-based bullying may benefit from a more complete awareness of the range of bullying victimization experienced by SGMY. Development of multi-item scales of bullying that reflect the six common experiences of bullying presented in this study would allow researchers to quantitatively explore the range of bullying behaviors experienced by SGMY, and would aid in the conceptualization and successful implementation of anti-bullying interventions.
性少数群体和跨性别青年(SGMY)比非性少数群体和跨性别青年更容易遭受欺凌和暴力,导致心理健康和身体健康状况恶化,学业成绩不佳的风险增加。很少有研究探讨性少数群体和跨性别青年(SGMY)所经历的整个欺凌范围。本研究的目的是定性描述 SGMY 遭受欺凌受害的方式。我们对来自在线社交媒体的 20 名年龄在 14-18 岁(中位数年龄为 16 岁)的不同 SGMY 进行了半结构化访谈。样本包括 10 名顺性别女孩、4 名顺性别男孩、2 名跨性别者和 4 名其他性别认同者。10 名参与者自认为是双性恋者,6 名自认为是女同性恋者,4 名自认为是男同性恋者。研究结果表明,参与者有六种常见的欺凌经历:(a)言语骚扰;(b)性别监管;(c)身体暴力;(d)性骚扰;(e)被视为性侵犯者和变态者;以及(f)社会排斥。SGMY 描述了欺凌受害范围从公开到隐蔽的态度和行为,他们阐述了几种形式的欺凌可能不会被异性恋和顺性别青年所经历。这些结果支持了先前定性研究的结果,并表明,为解决基于学校的欺凌行为而进行的努力可能需要更全面地了解 SGMY 所经历的欺凌范围。开发反映本研究中六种常见欺凌经历的多项目欺凌量表,将使研究人员能够定量探索 SGMY 所经历的欺凌行为范围,并有助于概念化和成功实施反欺凌干预措施。