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Parenting behavior and the risk of becoming a victim and a bully/victim: a meta-analysis study.

TLDR
Positive parenting behavior is related to a moderate increase of risk for becoming a bully/victim and small to moderate effects on victim status at school, and intervention programs against bullying should extend their focus to include families and start before children enter school.
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This article is published in Child Abuse & Neglect.The article was published on 2013-12-01 and is currently open access. It has received 416 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Parenting styles & Peer victimization.

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Impact of Bullying in Childhood on Adult Health, Wealth, Crime, and Social Outcomes

TL;DR: Victims of childhood bullying, including those that bullied others (bully-victims), were at increased risk of poor health, wealth, and social-relationship outcomes in adulthood even after the authors controlled for family hardship and childhood psychiatric disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bullying in schools: the state of knowledge and effective interventions.

TL;DR: The prevalence, age and gender differences, and various types of bullying, as well as why it happens and how long it lasts, are discussed, starting from the large surveys carried out in western countries and to a lower extent in low- and middle-income countries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Socioeconomic Status and Bullying: A Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: SES provides little guidance for targeted intervention, and all schools and children, not just those with more socioeconomic deprivation, should be targeted to reduce the adverse effects of bullying.
Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic review of theoretical studies on bullying and cyberbullying: Facts, knowledge, prevention, and intervention

TL;DR: In this article, a systematic review of systematic reviews and meta-analyses on the topic of bullying and cyberbullying is presented, showing that one of every three children is involved in some forms of bullying.
Journal ArticleDOI

Annual Research Review: The persistent and pervasive impact of being bullied in childhood and adolescence: implications for policy and practice.

TL;DR: The evidence for an independent contribution of childhood bullying victimisation to the development of poor outcomes throughout the life span, including mental, physical and socioeconomic outcomes, is reviewed, and the implications for policy and practice are discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

School and Home Relationships and Their Impact on School Bullying

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relationship between stress and support and students' experience of school, including bullying and victimization, using path analysis and found that the expected impact of poor peer relationships and bullying/victimization, relationships with teachers exerted an equally powerful influence on students' reports of bullying.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bullying and victimisation in school children: The role of social identity, problem-solving style, and family and school context

TL;DR: The relationship between social identity, family and school context, problem-solving style, self-esteem, health behaviour, psychological distress, and victimisation was explored in a quasi-experimental survey of 461 children aged between 11 and 15 years old as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

A prospective longitudinal study of children’s theory of mind and adolescent involvement in bullying

TL;DR: Identifying and supporting children with poor ToM early in life could help reduce their vulnerability for involvement in bullying and thus limit its adverse effects on mental health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parenting influences on bullying and victimization

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the parental styles and personal characteristics of bullies and victims, and disentangled factors related to bully/victims from factors that were related to children who were only bullies or only victims.
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Q1. What are the contributions in this paper?

Copyright and reuse: The Warwick Research Archive Portal ( WRAP ) makes the work of researchers of the University of Warwick available open access under the following conditions. Copyright © and all moral rights to the version of the paper presented here belong to the individual author ( s ) and/or other copyright owners. 

Associations between caregiver support, bullying, and depressive symptomatology among sexual minority and heterosexual girls: Results from the 2008 Boston youth survey. 

supervisioncategory showed moderating effects according to continent (Qb = 16.862; p < 0.001) withEuropean studies finding less supervision for victims (Mean ES = -0.311; p < 0.001; N = 1). 

Cheng et al., 2010 China 9015 -0.18 -0.27 -0.10 -4.22 0.000 Demanet & Van Houtte, 2012 Belgium 11872 -0.02 -0.09 0.05 -0.56 0.579 Demaray & Malecki, 2003 US 499 -0.36 -0.63 -0.09 -2.57 0.010 Fanti, Demetriou, Hawa, 2012 Cyprus 1416 -0.40 -0.47 -0.33 -11.46 0.000 Franic et al., 2011 Croatia 803 -0.30 -0.44 -0.17 -4.31 0.000 Holt & Espelage, 2007 US 784 -0.38 -0.60 -0.16 -3.44 0.001 Ma, 2001 Canada 13751 -0.01 -0.02 0.01 -0.71 0.480 Marini et al., 2006 Canada 7290 -0.28 -0.35 -0.21 -7.84 0.000 Murray-Harvey & Slee, 2010 Australia 888 -0.22 -0.30 -0.15 -5.66 0.000 Perren & Hornung, 2005 Switzerland 1107 -0.24 -0.54 0.07 -1.54 0.125 

In the linear regression analysis, theintercept value provides a measure of asymmetry; the larger its deviation from zero, the morepronounced the asymmetry (Egger, Smith, Schneider, & Minder, 1997). 

Bully-victims: Parental involvement and support showed significant moderator effectsaccording to the assessment method (Qb = 7.03; p < 0.05) suggesting that children who self-reported victimization (Mean ES = -0.35; p < 0.001; N = 8) were less likely to have parentswho are involved and supportive. 

The reasonbehind developing such problems may be partly due to exposure to harsher parenting ratherthan being a bully and victim simultaneous. 

if small studies with controversial results were lesslikely to be published, the correlation between variance and effect size would be high. 

70 studies (N=119 samples for victims; N=55 samples for bully/victims)were included in the meta-analysis and are shown in Table 1.