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Resilience in the face of peer victimization and perceived discrimination: the role of individual and familial factors

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Version 2 2023-03-20, 15:42
Version 1 2022-01-18, 15:11
journal contribution
posted on 2023-03-20, 15:42 authored by Daniela Fonseca de Freitas, Marina Mendonca, Wolke Dieter, Edna Marturano, Anne Marie Fontaine, Susana Coimbra

Background

Peer victimization and discrimination are two related forms of social victimization. However, the majority of studies only focus on one form or the other. This study investigates resilience in victims of both these forms of violence.


Objective

To identify individual and family level factors that foster, or hinder, resilience in the face of both peer victimization and perceived discrimination.


Participants

In a sample of 2975 high-school students, 22% (n = 644) met the criteria for substantial social victimization. The sample's mean age was 16.5 years, 57% were girls, 19% were in vocational courses, 12% were from an ethnic minority background, and 5% were lesbian, gay, or bisexual.


Method

A measure of resilience was created by regressing the mean levels of current mental health, self-esteem, and life satisfaction on the frequency of lifetime peer victimization and past year perceived discrimination. Regression analyses were conducted to identify correlates of resilience considering protective and vulnerability factors, including sociodemographic information, anxious personality, empathy, coping strategies, familial optimism, and the relationship with their mother and father.


Results

Resilience was associated with low anxious personality, four coping strategies (active, use of humor, low self-blame, low substance use), and satisfaction with the relationship with the mother.


Conclusions

Resilience is related to both behavioral and meaning-making coping strategies, personality traits, and satisfaction in relationships. This study's findings can be used to tailor interventions to foster resilience in adolescents exposed to social victimization.

Funding

RESILIENCE AND PERCEPTION OF DISCRIMINATION IN YOUNG PEOPLE IN RESPECT OF SEXUAL ORIENTATION, ETHNIC AND PARENTAL CONJUGAL STATUS

Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia

Find out more...

International Students' USP Grant Programme (2014.1.3765.1.1)

COST Action 1311 (project INTERFASOL) for a short-term scientific mission

Centre for Psychology at the University of Porto by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (CPUP UID/PSI/00050/2013; FEDER/COMPETE2020 POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007294)

History

Author affiliation

Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour, College of Life Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Child Abuse and Neglect

Volume

125

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

0145-2134

Acceptance date

2022-01-11

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2023-03-20

Language

en

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