ABSTRACT

Cyberbullying is a problem that is being increasingly investigated by researchers, however, much of the cyberbullying research literature to date has focused on children and youth. Cyberbullying at University in International Contexts fills the gap in the research literature by examining the nature, extent, impacts, proposed solutions, and policy and practice considerations of bullying in the cyber-world at post-secondary institutions, where reports of serious cyberbullying incidents have become more prevalent.

This book brings together cutting-edge research from around the world to examine the issue of cyberbullying through a multi-disciplinary lens, offering an array of approaches, interpretations, and solutions. It is not solely focused on cyberbullying by and against students, but also includes cyberbullying by and against faculty members, and permutations involving both students and faculty, as well as institutional staff, presenting perspectives from students, practitioners and senior university policy makers. It draws on research from education, criminology, psychology, sociology, communications, law, health sciences, social work, humanities, labour studies and is valuable reading for graduate students in these fields. It is also essential reading for policymakers, practitioners and University administrators who recognize their responsibility to provide a healthy workplace for their staff, as well as a safe and respectful environment for their students.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Context, framework, and perspective

part I|91 pages

Nature and extent

chapter 1|14 pages

Cyberbullying among university students in France

Prevalence, consequences, coping, and intervention strategies

chapter 4|14 pages

MySpace or yours?

An exploratory study of homophobic and transphobic cyberbullying of post-secondary students

chapter 5|14 pages

Power in the tower

The gendered nature of cyberbullying among students and faculty at Canadian universities

part II|42 pages

Impacts

chapter 7|13 pages

From traditional bullying to cyberbullying

Cybervictimization among higher education students

chapter 8|14 pages

“You need a thick skin …”

Impacts of cyberbullying at Canadian universities

chapter 9|13 pages

Student-to-faculty targeted cyberbullying

The impact on faculty

part III|40 pages

Solutions

chapter 10|16 pages

In the e-presence of others

Understanding and developing constructive cyber-bystander action

chapter 11|5 pages

The fairness lens

A university ombudsperson’s perspective on building a kinder online culture on campus

chapter 12|6 pages

Designing healthy and supportive campus communities

An example from Simon Fraser University

part IV|46 pages

Policy

chapter 15|17 pages

Cyberbullying in the Australian university context

The shades of harm and implications for law and policy

chapter 16|14 pages

What’s policy got to do with it?

The focus on cyberbullying policy at the university level

chapter 17|3 pages

Faculty members who are bullies