Political controversies give rise to bullying

Political controversies give rise to bullying

FPJ BureauUpdated: Monday, June 24, 2019, 11:05 AM IST
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Washington D.C.: Heated political discourse over proposed laws involving marginalised groups can contribute to an increase in bullying. The study found that in the run-up to a statewide voter referendum to ban gay marriage in California, young people reported significantly more homophobic bullying. In fact, homophobic bullying peaked that school year and declined after the public debate about the initiative in question subsided.

We think that young people don’t hear what adults and lawmakers are talking about, but they do,” said Stephen Russell, senior author of the paper and chair of the Human Development and Family Sciences Department at The University of Texas at Austin.

According to researchers, the study provides empirical evidence that public debates about policies and laws involving marginalised groups can lead bullies to target young people identified as being part of those groups. Public votes and voter referendums on the rights of minority groups occur in approximately half of U.S. states.

Our findings suggest that the public discourse surrounding these votes may increase the risk for bias-based bullying” said Mark Hatzenbuehler, first author of the paper published in the Journal of Pediatrics. The study looked at yearly survey data from nearly 5 million middle and high school students in more than 5,000 schools in California from 2001 to 2015 and whether those students experienced homophobic bullying.

Between the 2001-02 school year and the 2008-09 school year, during which the Proposition 8 vote took place, the rate of homophobic bullying increased, rising from 7.6 percent of students reporting they experienced bullying to 10.8 per cent — a 30 per cent increase — even as trends in other types of bullying related to race or ethnicity, religion, and gender declined. Homophobic bullying peaked that year, with 10.8 per cent of students reporting they experienced bullying, but the rate steadily decreased every year after.

Russell pointed out that the rate of homophobic bullying was higher even than the estimated population of LGBT students. “The data are telling us  that straight kids are getting bullied for this, too. It’s all about what the bullies perceive,” Russell said.

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