The effects of viewing indirect aggression on television
Over the past 50 years, research has focussed on the effects of viewing violence in the media. However, another form of aggression exists, one that is much more subtle and harder to recognize. Indirect (and relational) aggression are manipulative and often covert forms of aggression where the aggres...
Main Author: | Coyne, Sarah Marie |
---|---|
Published: |
University of Central Lancashire
2003
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.400752 |
Similar Items
-
Mythic commons : a perspective on law’s violent society
by: Nayar, R. Jayakumar
Published: (1997) -
Let's talk about peace: mediation in civil conflict
by: Clayton, Govinda
Published: (2013) -
The Politics of peace education in post-conflict settings : the case of the education for peace programme in Bosnia and Herzegovina
by: Tinker, Vanessa
Published: (2013) -
How virtual temas use media to manage conflict
by: Chen, Jiyun
Published: (2007) -
A comparison of communal conflict dynamics and sub-national patterns of violence in Indonesia and Nigeria, Central Sulawesi Province and Kaduna State
by: Diprose, Rachael
Published: (2012)