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Gender, Bullying Victimization, and Juvenile Delinquency: A Test of General Strain Theory

NCJ Number
232511
Journal
Victims and Offenders Volume: 3 Issue: 4 Dated: October 2008 Pages: 346-364
Author(s)
Francis T. Cullen; James D. Unnever; Jennifer L. Hartman; Michael G. Turner; Robert Agnew
Date Published
October 2008
Length
19 pages
Annotation
This study examined how bullying effects delinquency and substance use.
Abstract
Bullying has emerged as a salient problem in the school environment. Using a sample of 2,437 middle-school students from a metropolitan Virginia area, the authors explored the impact of school bullying victimization on delinquent involvement and substance use. The analysis was guided by general strain theory (GST). Consistent with GST, bullying victimization has a significant, if weak, direct relationship with wayward conduct. This effect is robust across gender groups. Notably, an examination of "conditioning" effects showed that the impact of this strain on delinquency is stronger among students with weaker school social bonds and with higher levels of aggressive attitudes. The results thus suggest that bullying victimization should be considered as a risk factor that places youngsters in jeopardy of criminal involvement. (Published Abstract)