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Journal Article

Citation

Ireland JL, Power C. J. Aggress. Confl. Peace Res. 2009; 1(3): 22-36.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This study explores the association between fear of bullying and psychological distress. Participants were 293 adult prisoners, including men (n = 169) and women (n = 124), split into groups of ‘pure bullies’ (ie. solely reporting perpetration), ‘bully/victims’ (reporting perpetration and being victimised), ‘pure victims’ (reporting being victimised) and those ‘not-involved’. All completed the Direct and Indirect Prisoner Behaviour Checklist - Revised (DIPC-R), a measure of psychological health (General Health Questionnaire: GHQ-28) and the Fear of Bullying Scale (FBS). The FBS was piloted on a sample of adult male prisoners (n = 69) prior to the main study. It was hypothesised that experience of victimisation would associate with higher levels of fear; that bully/victims would present with higher levels of fear than pure bullies (perpetrators); that fear would be associated with increased levels of psychological distress; and, finally, that women would report higher levels of fear than men. Pure victims reported higher levels of fear than pure bullies and those not-involved, with bully/victims reporting increased levels of fear in comparison to those not-involved. These findings did not, however, hold across sex, with women overall reporting higher levels of fear than men. Structural equation models indicated no direct relationship between experiencing victimisation and psychological distress, but rather an indirect relationship through fear of victimisation. The results are discussed with reference to the association between victimisation and psychological distress and the importance of this finding to the wider research field.

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