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Journal Article

Citation

Cáceres I, Palacios J, Ferrari L, Ranieri S, Rosnati R, Miller LC, Theie S, Carrera P, de Montclos MOP, Román M. Child Care Health Dev. 2024; 50(1): e13217.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/cch.13217

PMID

38265140

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Little is known about bullying experienced by internationally adopted teens residing in Europe.

OBJECTIVES: Within the framework of an international research effort involving several European countries, the main goal of this study was to explore the experiences of bullying victimization suffered by adopted adolescents, as well as its impact on their psychological adjustment.

METHODS: The sample consisted of 199 adolescents born in Eastern European countries and adopted in France (n = 50), Italy (n = 59), Norway (n = 25) and Spain (n = 65).

RESULTS: More than half of the adopted adolescents had been exposed to some form of peer victimization in the previous 2 months, with verbal harassment and social exclusion being the most common forms of victimization. Differences between receiving countries were not statistically significant, suggesting a common pattern for Eastern European adopted adolescents living in Western Europe. More frequent experiences of peer victimization were associated with more psychological difficulties among the adopted adolescents.

CONCLUSIONS: Findings highlight that adopted adolescents might have considerable difficulties in social integration with peers; these experiences of peer victimization might play an important role hindering their psychosocial adjustment. The socioemotional development of adopted people is not only linked to their pre-adoptive experiences; factors in their daily lives (i.e., peer relationships) may also be associated with their psychological adjustment later in life. Interventions are needed to promote the real inclusion of these groups of children in their social and educational contexts.


Language: en

Keywords

Adolescent; Child; Humans; Schools; Spain; Europe; Italy; bullying; *Bullying; international adoption; psychological adjustment

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