Examining the extent to which mobile bully-victim behaviour is a consequence of social integration or aggressive behaviour

The absence of a framework or policy to address bullying in South Africa compels the country to rely on pieces of legislation that are closely related to anti-bullying laws such as the Child Justice Act 75 of 2008 and Protection from Harassment Act 71 of 2011. Over-reliance on pieces of legislation...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jokazi, Nombulelo
Other Authors: Kyobe, Michael
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Commerce 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31588
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-315882020-10-06T05:11:44Z Examining the extent to which mobile bully-victim behaviour is a consequence of social integration or aggressive behaviour Jokazi, Nombulelo Kyobe, Michael Adolescents Aggressive Behaviour Bully-Victim Causes General Aggression Model The absence of a framework or policy to address bullying in South Africa compels the country to rely on pieces of legislation that are closely related to anti-bullying laws such as the Child Justice Act 75 of 2008 and Protection from Harassment Act 71 of 2011. Over-reliance on pieces of legislation creates challenges for victims of these bullying crimes because most of the relational aggression exerted towards victims goes unpunished. Some of the adolescents take the law into their own hands, thus, exacerbate and increases the complexity of bullying crimes. Due to advancements in Information and Communications Technology, bully-victim behaviour does not only take place in physical environments such as schools, but it takes place anywhere, anytime (24/7) on Mobile Social Networks. In 2011, a cyberbullying study by the Centre of Justice and Crime Prevention reported that 69.7% of the youth in South Africa falls in the category of bully-victims. This is alarming given that few studies focus on the role of bullyvictims in South Africa. The exact cause for mobile bully-victim behaviour is unclear, and previous studies have highlighted it is between aggressive behaviour and social integration. Therefore, this study examined aggressive behaviour and social integration to determine which of these two factors contribute the most to mobile bully-victim behaviour. Additionally, mobile social network features that enable this behaviour were investigated. The factors that lead to aggressive behaviour and social integration, resulting in mobile bully-victims, were identified through a literature review. Paper-based surveys were issued to Johannesburg high school adolescents. Johannesburg was mainly selected based on finding by previous studies, which highlighted that most of the online bullying and victimisation happens amongst adolescents in Johannesburg. After data was collected, the results were analysed using Statistica version 13.5. The analysis revealed that, indeed, both aggressive behaviour and social integration cause mobile bully-victim behaviour, however, social integration contributed more than aggressive behaviour. The findings also revealed that WhatsApp and Instagram were the most utilized social networks by mobile bullyvictims. There were no differences between males and females when it comes to mobile bullyvictim behaviour. The causes of mobile bully-victim behaviour that have been identified in this study can be used as a starting point to develop legislation/framework aimed at combating mobile bully-victim behaviour. Given that mobile bully-victims are more suicidal and suffer from depression, psychologists and therapists can use the knowledge obtained from this study to develop psychological treatments specifically for mobile bully-victims. 2020-03-13T13:48:30Z 2020-03-13T13:48:30Z 2018 2020-03-13T12:59:29Z Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31588 eng application/pdf Faculty of Commerce Department of Information Systems
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Adolescents
Aggressive Behaviour
Bully-Victim Causes
General Aggression Model
spellingShingle Adolescents
Aggressive Behaviour
Bully-Victim Causes
General Aggression Model
Jokazi, Nombulelo
Examining the extent to which mobile bully-victim behaviour is a consequence of social integration or aggressive behaviour
description The absence of a framework or policy to address bullying in South Africa compels the country to rely on pieces of legislation that are closely related to anti-bullying laws such as the Child Justice Act 75 of 2008 and Protection from Harassment Act 71 of 2011. Over-reliance on pieces of legislation creates challenges for victims of these bullying crimes because most of the relational aggression exerted towards victims goes unpunished. Some of the adolescents take the law into their own hands, thus, exacerbate and increases the complexity of bullying crimes. Due to advancements in Information and Communications Technology, bully-victim behaviour does not only take place in physical environments such as schools, but it takes place anywhere, anytime (24/7) on Mobile Social Networks. In 2011, a cyberbullying study by the Centre of Justice and Crime Prevention reported that 69.7% of the youth in South Africa falls in the category of bully-victims. This is alarming given that few studies focus on the role of bullyvictims in South Africa. The exact cause for mobile bully-victim behaviour is unclear, and previous studies have highlighted it is between aggressive behaviour and social integration. Therefore, this study examined aggressive behaviour and social integration to determine which of these two factors contribute the most to mobile bully-victim behaviour. Additionally, mobile social network features that enable this behaviour were investigated. The factors that lead to aggressive behaviour and social integration, resulting in mobile bully-victims, were identified through a literature review. Paper-based surveys were issued to Johannesburg high school adolescents. Johannesburg was mainly selected based on finding by previous studies, which highlighted that most of the online bullying and victimisation happens amongst adolescents in Johannesburg. After data was collected, the results were analysed using Statistica version 13.5. The analysis revealed that, indeed, both aggressive behaviour and social integration cause mobile bully-victim behaviour, however, social integration contributed more than aggressive behaviour. The findings also revealed that WhatsApp and Instagram were the most utilized social networks by mobile bullyvictims. There were no differences between males and females when it comes to mobile bullyvictim behaviour. The causes of mobile bully-victim behaviour that have been identified in this study can be used as a starting point to develop legislation/framework aimed at combating mobile bully-victim behaviour. Given that mobile bully-victims are more suicidal and suffer from depression, psychologists and therapists can use the knowledge obtained from this study to develop psychological treatments specifically for mobile bully-victims.
author2 Kyobe, Michael
author_facet Kyobe, Michael
Jokazi, Nombulelo
author Jokazi, Nombulelo
author_sort Jokazi, Nombulelo
title Examining the extent to which mobile bully-victim behaviour is a consequence of social integration or aggressive behaviour
title_short Examining the extent to which mobile bully-victim behaviour is a consequence of social integration or aggressive behaviour
title_full Examining the extent to which mobile bully-victim behaviour is a consequence of social integration or aggressive behaviour
title_fullStr Examining the extent to which mobile bully-victim behaviour is a consequence of social integration or aggressive behaviour
title_full_unstemmed Examining the extent to which mobile bully-victim behaviour is a consequence of social integration or aggressive behaviour
title_sort examining the extent to which mobile bully-victim behaviour is a consequence of social integration or aggressive behaviour
publisher Faculty of Commerce
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31588
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