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Journal Article

Citation

Bacchini D, Esposito C, Affuso G, Amodeo AL. Sex Res. Social Policy 2021; 18(3): 598-611.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, National Sexuality Resource Center)

DOI

10.1007/s13178-020-00484-4

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Introduction

Schools are among the most homophobic social contexts, where students who do not conform to gender norms are at high risk of stigma and discrimination.

Method

Using a multilevel approach, the aim of the current was to examine whether adolescents' engagement in homophobic bullying behavior was associated with personal values and stereotyped victim-blaming attributions at individual level, and perceptions of school as a community and frequency of teachers' reaction to bullying incidents at classroom level. Data were collected in 2010. The sample consisted of 2718 Italian middle and high school students (53.2% females; mean age = 15.36, SD = .85) from 144 classrooms.

Results

Results showed that self-transcendence values reduced the risk of engaging in homophobic bullying, whereas both self-enhancement values and stereotyped victim-blaming attributions were positively associated with homophobic bullying. At classroom level, only negative perceptions of school as a community had a unique positive contribution on homophobic bullying, over and above other individual and contextual factors. Two cross-level interactions were found, indicating that self-transcendence values had a significant effect in decreasing homophobic bullying in classrooms where teacher support was perceived as low, whereas stereotyped victim-blaming attributions had a significant effect in increasing homophobic bullying in classrooms where teacher support was perceived as high.

Conclusion

These findings provide further support to the social-ecological perspective as a useful guiding framework for understanding the complexity of factors predicting homophobic bullying.

Policy Implications

Efforts should be made to develop clear anti-bullying school policies explicitly dealing with the issue of homophobic bullying.


Language: en

Keywords

Homophobic bullying; Individual values; Multilevel approach; School climate; Stereotyped attributions; Teacher support

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