Half of 14- to 24-Year Olds Have Experienced Digitally Abusive Behavior, Survey Finds

2013 ◽  
Keyword(s):  
1984 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. 781-782
Author(s):  
Gene P. Sackett ◽  
David V. Baldwin
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura C. Petrolle ◽  
Silva M. Hassert ◽  
Rachel E. Wiley ◽  
Sharon E. Robinson-Kurpius

1992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melanie F. Shepard ◽  
James A. Campbell
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Nathan Stephens-Griffin ◽  
Jack Lampkin ◽  
Tanya Wyatt ◽  
Carol Stephenson

AbstractConflict between police, private security and political protesters is a topic that has been researched widely in criminology and other disciplines (e.g., Choudry 2019; Gilmore et al. 2019; Goyes and South 2017; Jackson et al. 2018; Rigakos 2002; South 1988; Weiss 1978). Adopting a green criminological lens, this article seeks to contribute to this rich body of research by examining police and private security responses to campaigning against opencast (open-pit) coal mining in Pont Valley, County Durham, United Kingdom (UK). Based on qualitative interviews, the article examines activists’ perceptions of responses to their campaign. Our findings reveal that rather than acting as neutral arbiters, police colluded with private interests, overlooking the abusive behavior of private security and bailiffs, particularly during the eviction of a protest camp at the proposed mining site. Activists believed that their right to protest was not respected, that their safety was jeopardized, and that police had willfully ignored a wildlife crime perpetrated by the mining company in order to enable mining to go ahead. Our article argues that the Pont Valley case fits into a wider pattern of repression of environmentalism in the UK, supporting Gilmore and colleagues’ (2019) argument that a progressive transformation in policing has been overstated.


2015 ◽  
Vol 31 (17) ◽  
pp. 2867-2888 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judy L. Postmus ◽  
Amanda Mathisen Stylianou ◽  
Sarah McMahon
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 116
Author(s):  
Diana Christina ◽  
Irwanto Irwanto

Kekerasan dalam rumah tangga mengacu pada segala bentuk perilaku semena-mena yang tidak hanya berupa kekerasan fisik, tetapi juga kekerasan verbal dan seksual. Kekerasan dalam rumah tangga adalah sebuah fenomena yang telah menarik perhatian dunia karena perilaku kasar yang diterima perempuan dari pasangannya dalam jangka panjang, yang mengarah pada konsekuensi buruk kesehatan mental seperti PTSD dalam bentuk pikiran yang mengganggu, mimpi buruk, kilas balik, hypervigilances, dan emosi-emosi negatif berlebih (kesedihan, kemarahan, kekecewaan, keputusasaan) yang dapat menyebabkan pikiran untuk bunuh diri. Dua wanita yang mengalami kekerasan dalam rumah tangga dan saat ini tinggal di tempat penampungan berpartisipasi dalam penelitian ini. Mereka diberikan teknik konseling berbasis Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) untuk membantu mereka menerima pengalaman mereka tanpa dihakimi dan untuk meningkatkan kapasitas mereka untuk mengendalikan pikiran dan emosi mereka. Konseling berbasis DBT diberikan dalam tiga sesi; toleransi terhadap tekanan, mindfulness, dan regulasi emosi. Kami melibatkan dua peserta perempuan yang diberi tempat tinggal sementara. Screening menggunakan Beck Depression Index (BDI-II) yang menunjukkan setidaknya tingkat depresi menengah atas, dan checklist tentang jenis kekerasan, dampak fisik dan psikologis yang disebabkan oleh perilaku pasangannya yang kasar. Setelah tiga sesi konseling berbasis DBT, peserta mulai mendapatkan kendali atas hidup mereka, menunjukkan peningkatan dalam kepercayaan diri dan menjunjung tinggi keyakinan bahwa mereka dapat maju. Domestic violence refers to any kind of abusive behavior that is not only physical, but also verbal and sexual violence. Domestic violence is a phenomenon that has garnered the worldwide attention due to the long term abusive behaviors that women have received from their partners, which leads to serious mental health consequences such as PTSD in the forms of intrusive thought, nightmares, flashback, hypervigilances, and overwhelming  negative emotions (sadness, anger, disappointment, hopelessness) that may lead to suicidal thoughts. Two women who experienced domestic abuse and currently living in a shelter particiated in this study. They were provided with a counseling technique based on (DBT) to help them accept their experiences without any judgement and to enhance their capacity to controlling their thoughts and emotion. Counseling based on DBT was given in three sessions; distress tolerance, mindfulness, and emotion regulation. We involved two female participants who were provided with a temporary shelter. Screening using a Beck Depression Index (BDI-II) showed at least moderate depression level and above, and a checklist form about the type of violence, physical and psychological impact caused by their abusive partner’s behavior. After three sessions of counseling based on DBT, participants started to gain control of their lives, show improvements in self-confidence and uphold a belief that they can move forward.


Bioimpacts ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Morteza Mahmoudi ◽  
Saya Ameli ◽  
Sherry Moss

Academic bullying occurs when senior scientists direct abusive behavior such as verbal insults, public shaming, isolation, and threatening toward vulnerable junior colleagues such as postdocs, graduate students and lab members. We believe that one root cause of bullying behavior is the pressure felt by scientists to compete for rankings designed to measure their scientific worth. These ratings, such as the h-index, have several unintended consequences, one of which we believe is academic bullying. Under pressure to achieve higher and higher rankings, in exchange for positive evaluations, grants and recognition, senior scientists exert undue pressure on their junior staff in the form of bullying. Lab members have little or no recourse due to the lack of fair institutional protocols for investigating bullying, dependence on grant or institutional funding, fear of losing time and empirical work by changing labs, and vulnerability to visa cancellation threats among international students. We call for institutions to reconsider their dependence on these over-simplified surrogates for real scientific progress and to provide fair and just protocols that will protect targets of academic bullying from emotional and financial distress.


2007 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Giustozzi

An assessment of the employment of mercenaries in Afghanistan gives mixed results. U.S. armed forces appear to have been happy with the Afghan Security Forces and ad hoc militias and only replaced them because of political reasons or because they felt that they were no longer needed. By contrast, the work of private security companies seems to have satisfied few. While in the short term no practical alternative to their use existed, it is not obvious that this option saves any money to the governments involved in the medium and long-term. Moreover, private security contractors are not subject to the control of military authorities, nor to military discipline. Their record of abusive behavior is indisputable and probably played a significant role in alienating the Afghan public. Unless much changes, the potential of private security companies in peacekeeping does not appear to be a bright one.


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