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A Longitudinal Analysis of Risk and Protective Factors of Bias-Based Bullying Victimization Among Adolescents

NCJ Number
310421
Journal
Journal of Interpersonal Violence Volume: Online Dated: 2025
Author(s)
Katharine B. Parodi; Melissa K. Holt; Pooja Aradhya; Jennifer Greif Green ; Gabriel J. Merrin
Date Published
February 2025
Annotation

This paper reports on a four-wave longitudinal study that investigated predictors of interpersonal victimization from bias-based bullying; it examined risk and protective factors, identifying some identity-based factors and trends in bullying victimization scores, and noting other factors that were associated with the intercept factor; and recommendations based on the findings include support for vulnerable youth and promotion of a positive school climate.

Abstract

Bias-based bullying (i.e., bullying targeting actual or perceived aspects of one’s identity) is a form of interpersonal victimization that has adverse consequences for youth functioning. While research has documented foundational knowledge on bias-based bullying, few studies have incorporated a multilevel longitudinal approach to examining theorized risk and protective factors of this complex phenomenon. The current study addresses this gap by investigating predictors (e.g., school climate and state laws) at multiple social-ecological levels and comparing the magnitude of coefficients. Three data sources were used: (a) data from a sample of adolescents (N = 639) participating in a four-wave longitudinal study regarding their experiences with bias-based bullying, (b) external data on enumerated anti-bullying laws, and (c) external data on protected categories in state hate crime statutes. The authors estimated a series of latent growth curve models to examine trajectories of bias-based bullying victimization over the 18-month study period and added social-ecological predictors (sociodemographic characteristics, peer support, family support, school climate, enumerated anti-bullying laws, and an index of protected categories in state hate crime laws) of bias-based bullying victimization. Key findings documented that sexual minority youth and youth identifying as another racial identity, non-Hispanic had higher initial bias-based bullying victimization scores, with sexual minority youth decreasing at a significantly more rapid rate than heterosexual youth. Peer support, family support, school climate, and enumerated anti-bullying laws were significantly associated with the intercept factor (i.e., initial status) of bias-based bullying victimization. Notably, school climate emerged as an important protective factor in the fully adjusted model, predicting initial bias-based bullying victimization scores. This study provides new information on risk and protective factors and is critical for tailoring prevention and intervention efforts to mitigate this form of victimization. Bolstering support for vulnerable youth and promoting a positive school climate are recommended. (Published Abstract Provided)