Cyberbullying:
The International Experience
Oslo,6th April 2016
Professor Mona O’Moore
National Anti-Bullying Research & Resource Centre (ABC)
Dublin City University
Plan	of	Talk:	From	an	Interna1onal	Perspec1ve	
1.		Defini1on	of	bullying:		tradi&onal,	cyber	and		sex&ng	
2.			Some	Research	findings:		prevalence,	age,	gender,	family	affluence,	migrant	
communi&es		
3.			Impact	of	cyber-bullying	
4.			Bystander	Roles	in	Cyberbullying	
5.			Student	Opinions	of	Cyberbullying	
6.			Mo1ves,	Personality	and	Self-Esteem	
7.			Preven1on	and	Interven1on:			Strengths	and		Weaknesses	
8.			Conclusions	&	Recommenda1ons
What is Bullying?
Traditional
Bullying Cyber-
Bullying
Traditional Bullying
Definition
Bullying has 3 main criteria:
§ intention to cause harm to the victim;
§ repetition of the abusive behaviour over a period of time;
§ imbalance of power between the victim and bully/bullies.
However, one particularly severe once off incident, which creates an
ongoing sense of intimidation can also be considered bullying.
O’Moore,M.(2010).Understanding	School	Bullying	:A	Guide	to	Parents	and	Teachers	
(Veritas	Publishing)
Systematic victmisation
§  Physical aggression
§  Verbal abuse
§  Gestures – often threatening
§  Exclusion / Relational
§  Extortion
Traditional Bullying most often
takes the form of…
Cyber-Bullying : A definition
“Cyber-bullying is an aggressive intentional
act carried out by a group or an individual,
using electronic forms of contact repeatedly
and over time against a victim who cannot
easily defend him or herself”
Peter	Smith	et.al.2008
Defining	Cyberbullying	:	Is	there	
common	ground	among	researchers?	
	
		Strong	agreement	rela1ng	to:	
Ø  		the	inten1onality	
Ø  		the	imbalance	of	power											
	
			More	controversial:	
Ø  	repe11on			
Need	to	dis1nguish	between:	
Ø  cyber	aggression	and	cyberbullying	
	
																							Mona	O’Moore,	Understanding	Cyberbullying:	A	Guide	for	Parents	and	Teachers	2014
Cyber-Bullying	Tac1cs	
•  Harassment: e.g. sending insulting or threatening messages;
•  Denigration: spreading rumours on the internet;
•  Outing and trickery: revealing personal information about a person
which was shared in confidence;
•  Exclusion: preventing a person from taking part in online social
activities, such as games or chats.
•  Flaming or Trolling: sending insulting messages to inflame emotions of
others so that flame war is created in ‘public’ places such as a chat
room or a social networking site.
•  Impersonation: Perpetrator uses the victim’s password to send or post
a hateful message / Perpetrator alters the victim’s profile
•  Happy Slapping: Filming and forwarding direct physical assaults
which are degrading and humiliating to the victim.
•  Sexting: Embarrasses victim by posting messages or images of a
sexual nature of victims or others e.g. the posting of victim’s breasts
caused suicide of Amanda in Canada.
																																																																
					Mona	O’Moore,Understanding	Cyberbullying:A	Guide	for	Parents	and	Teachers,		2014
Methods	of	Cyberbullying
Girls	
%	
	Boys		
%	
Total	
%	
Text-Messages			
(In	school) 		
4.1	 5.1	 5.8	
	
Text-Messages		
(Out	of	school) 		
10.3	 10.6	 10.4	
	
Internet	pos1ngs							
(e.g.	Bebo,	You	Tube,	My	Space,	
Facebook	&	Nimble)		
5.5	 6.4	 6.1	
Camera	or	Video	clips	(taken)	 12.2	 17.2	 15.8	
Camera	or	Video	clips	(sent)	 4.8	 8.4	 7.1	
Telephone	Calls 		 8.6	 11.8	 10.2	
Emails	 3.3	 3.4	 3.1	
On-Line	Chat	Rooms	 8.6	 8.2	 8.4	
Instant	Messages	 7.8	 9.2	 8.5	
Percentage of girls and boys reporting different forms of
cyber-bullying. O’Moore & Minton 2011
Differences between Cyber &
Traditional Bullying
•  Cyber-bullying	primarily	indirect	rather	than	face	to	face	
and	may	be	anonymous.	
•  Cyber-bullying	has	the	poten1al	to	reach	large	
audiences.	
•  It	has	the	poten1al	to	stay	in	cyber-space	indefinitely.	
•  The	aggressor	does	not	see	the	vic1ms	facial/emo1onal	
reac1on	in	the	first	instance.		
•  The	aaributes	that	make	for	imbalance	of	power	differ.	
•  Cyberbullying	allows	perpetrators	to	reach	their	vic1ms	
anywhere	on	the	planet.	No	safe	haven.
Prevalence:	Cyber-Bullying	Studies,2004-2009	
																																																								 			 		
																																																							 			 		 		 		 		 		
					 		
Study	 Cyber	vicFms		 Cyber	bullies		 Cyber	bully-vicFm	
	
O’Moore	&	Minton	
(2009)	(Ireland)		
9.8		 4.4		 4.1		
	
Ybarra&	Mitchell	
(2004)	(U.S.A.)		
4.0		 12.0	 3.0	
	
Li	(2005)	(Canada)		 24.9		 14.5		 54.0	
Kowalski	&	Limber	
(2007)	(U.S.A.)		
11.1		 4.1		 6.8	
Hinduja	&	
Patchia(2009)	(U.S.A.)		
10.0		 8.0		 5.0	
	
Reua1,	Berone	&	
Zaneh	(2009)	(Italy)		
7.0	 6.0		 6.0	
Wang,	Iannoh	&	
Nansel	(2009)	(U.S.A.)	
5.3	 3.8	 4.5
Factors	that	make		
cross-cultural	comparisons	difficult	
•  Defini1ons	of	cyber-bullying.	Was	there	one?	If	so	what	criteria?	
•  Methodology:	The	measurements	used,	e.g.	self-reports(online,	
offline);	teacher	or	peer	reports.		
•  Different	repor1ng	periods	(lower	prevalence	when	surveyed	most	
recently)		
•  Age	(lower	prevalence	among	the	younger	&	older	students)	
•  Typology	of	Bullying	when	repor1ng	results.	
•  Sub-categories	of	cyber-bullying	surveyed.
Source: EU Kids Online report
Livingstone,S.Haddon,L.,Gorzig,A.&
Olafson,K.(2011).	Risks	and	safety	
for	children	on	the	Internet:	the	
Ireland	report,	London,	LSE.	
	
													Cyber-	vic1ms			Trad-vic1ms	
Europe 6% 13%
Norway 8% 31%
Ireland 4% 23%
Russia 20% 20%
Australia 13% 16%
Data about bullying,
All forms & internet
Overlap between Traditional
and Cyber-Bullying (O’Moore, 2012)
•  71 % of cyber-victims were traditional victims
•  28.9% of cyber-victims were traditional bullies
•  67.4% of cyber-bullies were traditional bullies
•  32.0% of cyber-bullies were traditional victims
Supports	Sourander	et	al	(2010)	study	of	2215	Finnish	teens	aged	13-16	years
WHO	Study	of	11-15	year	olds	
in	42		countries(2014)	
v Age	Effect:	Significant	for	only	a	minority	of	
countries	with	levels	higher	for	boys	at	11years	and	
peaking	for	girls	at	13	years.	
v Gender	Differences:	Seen	in	less	than	half	of	the	
countries	with	no	clear	paaern	emerging.	Some	
showed	boys	being	cyber-bullied	more	and	some	
girls.	
	
v Family	Influence:	Differences	were	evident	in	very	
few	countries	and	regions	in	which	cyberbullying	was	
associated	with	lower	affluence.
Effects of Bullying
§ Erosion of confidence and self-esteem
§ Feelings of frustration
§ Anger
§ Sadness, hopelessness
§ Loneliness and depression
§ Inability to concentrate at school/work
§ Not wanting to go to school/work
§ Staying offline
§ Distrustful of others
§ Self-harm 56% LGBTI (14-18yrs)
§ Suicidal thoughts 70% LGBTI (14-18yrs)
§ Suicide
Note: Being cyber & traditionally bullied increases risk of depression and loneliness.
(Gradinger et al, 2009; Bright et al, 2012)
0	 5	 10	 15	 20	 25	 30	 35	
It	made	me	feel	another	way	
It	didn't	bother	me	
Frightened	
Angry	
Upset	
Girls	
Boys	
How	Irish	Cyber	Vic1ms	Feel	When	Targeted		
																																		(N	=	564)											O’Moore,2012
Risk	Factors:	Mo1ves,	Personality	
and	Self-Esteem
Cyber-Vic1ms:			Most	at	risk	are	those	who:	
•  Have	poor	peer	rela1onships	
•  Have	both	emo1onal	and	behavioural	difficul1es	
•  Spend	more	1me	online	unsupervised	
•  Bully	others	face	to	face	
	
Cyber	Bullies:			Most	at	risk	are	those	who:	
•  Are	impulsive		
•  Hold	pro	aggressive	or	pro	bullying	ahtudes	
•  Have	low	levels	of	empathy(both	affec1ve	and	cogni1ve)		
•  Poor	moral	responsibility(moral	disengagement)	
•  Seek	popularity	among	peers	through	aggression	
•  Are	bullied	face	to	face	
Cyber	Bully-Vic1ms:	Most	at	risk	are	those	who:	
•  Share	the	psychiatric	and	psychosocial	risk	factors	of	cyberbullies	and	
vic1ms	
M.O’Moore(2014).Understanding	Cyberbullying:	A	guide	for	Parents	and	Teachers,	Veritas	Publishing.
Mo1ves	for	Bullying	Others	in	
Cyberspace	
Gradinger,Strohmeier	and	Spiel,2012	
•  Power:	To	show	that	I	am	more	powerful	
•  Affilia1on:	To	be	accepted	by	my	friends	
•  Fun:	Because	it	was	fun	
•  Anger:	Because	I	was	angry	
	
	Parry	Apab,2011	
		
•  The	vengeful	angel	
•  The	power-hungry	
•  The	mean	girls	
•  The	inadvertent	bully	(or	‘because	I	can’)
0	
1	
2	
3	
4	
5	
6	
Extraversion	 Psycho1cism	 Neuro1cism	 Lie	Scale	
M
e
a
n	
S
c
o
r
e	
Junior	Eysenck	Personality	QuesFonnaire	Revised	
Pure	Vic1ms	
Pure	Bullies	
Bully-Vic1ms	
Not	Involved
Factors	that	Influence	Cyberbullying	
•  Peer	and	Family	Rela1onships		
•  The	class	and	school	climate	
•  Student’s	feeling	of	trust	in	teachers	and	staff	
•  Media	Repor1ng	
	
Report	commissioned	by	the	Department	of	Educa1on	and	Skills,	Ireland,	on		the	
impact	of	cyberbullying(H.Gleeson,2014)
Participant Roles in Bullying
DistribuFon	in	%	
	Perpetrators		8%	
Assistants	7%	
Reinforcers	20%	
Vic1ms	12%	
Defenders	17%	
Outsiders	24%	
Others	12%	
Salmivalli et al. (1996) were
able to identify clear roles
within the process of bullying
for 88% of the school
children surveyed.
The results were replicated in
a study in German
comprehensive schools
(Schäfer & Korn, 2004).
Fellow pupils have an important role in the process of bullying. Therefore, it is sensible to
begin an intervention at the class level.
Percentage	of	Irish	classmates	who	have	been			
witness	to	Cyber-Bullying		
Knowledge	of	those	vic1mised:	
Girls	=	39.0%	
Boys	=	29.9%	
Total	=	33.1%	
	
Knowledge	of	those	who	bully	others:	
Girls	=	29.4%	
Boys	=	27.7%		
Total	=	28.4%																																																					M.O’Moore,2012
How	Irish	students	respond	when	they	are	
witness	to	cyber-bullying	acts				(O’Moore,2012)	
Girls	
%	
Boys	
%	
Total	
%	
I	joined	in	the	cyber-bullying		 0.5	 1.5	 1.0	
I	had	fun	watching	it		 1.9	 4.5	 3.2	
It	upset	me	but	I	did	nothing	
to	stop	it		
7.4	 5.4	 6.4	
I	tried	to	stop	it		 6.3	 4.6	 5.5	
I	tried	to	support	the	vic1m		 8.5	 4.8	 6.7	
I	told	an	adult	(teacher	or	
parent)		
1.7	 0.8	 1.3	
I	did	something	else		 4.1	 5.8	 4.9
How	Irish	vic1ms	responded	to	Cyber-Bullying	
(N=664)	
Girls	
%	
Boys	
%	
Total	
%	
I	have	told	one	or	more	friends		 50.2	 20.2	 35.2	
I	have	told	an	adult	at	school		 8.0	 5.2	 6.6	
I	have	told	my	parents		 26.7	 10.9	 18.8	
I	was	afraid	to	tell		 7.0	 6.1	 6.6	
I	have	not	told	anybody		 7.0	 10.1	 8.6	
I	sent	an	angry	response	back		 31.4	 29.4	 30.4	
I	asked	the	person	to	stop		 20.9	 11.6	 16.3	
I	did	not	respond		 15.8	 11.6	 13.7	
I	did	something	else		 17.5	 25.5	 21.5
Coping strategies
(Riebel et al., 2009; Hoff & Mitchell, 2008)
	
•  Social	coping:	seeking	help	from	friends,	family,	teachers,	peer	
supporters;	
	
•  Aggressive	coping:	retalia1on,	physical	aaacks;	verbal	threats;	
	
•  Helpless	coping:	hopelessness;	passive	reac1ons,	such	as	
avoidance;	displays	of	emo1on;	
	
•  CogniFve	coping:	responding	asser1vely,	using	reason;	analyzing	
the	bullying	episode	and	the	bully’s	behaviour.		
•  Technical	coping:	switching	off	the	computer,		changing		email	
address	or	nickname	and	only	giving	them	to	people	that	can	be	
trusted,	and	showing	the	messages	to	a	grown-up.’
COST	AcFon:	Data	CollecFon	in	30	Countries		
–  Austria		
–  Australia		
–  Belgium		
–  Bulgaria		
–  Czech	Republic	
–  Denmark		
–  Estonia		
–  Finland		
–  France		
–  Germany		
–  Greece		
–  Hungary		
–  Iceland		
–  Ireland		
–  Israel		
–  Italy	
• Latvia		
• Lithuania		
• Luxemburg		
• Netherlands		
• Norway		
• Poland		
• Portugal		
• Slovenia		
• Spain		
• Sweden		
• Switzerland		
• Turkey		
• Ukraine		
• United	Kingdom
Strengths	
The	majority	of	guidelines	recognised	the	need	:	
•  For	schools	to	take		a	whole	school	community	
approach	
•  For		teachers	to	treat	all	reports	of	cyber-bullying	
seriously	
•  For	young	people	to	develop	cyber-safety	skills	
•  For	young	people	to	exercise	principles	of	ne1queae		
•  For	young	people	to	develop	effec1ve	coping	strategies	
•  For		young	people	to	report	incidents	of	cyber-bullying	
•  To	close	the	digital	divide	between	young	people,	
parents	and	teachers		
•  For	parents	and	young	people	to	seek	further	online	
informa1on	and	resources
Current	Weaknesses	
Requiring	AcFon		
Future	guidelines	need	to	encourage	
	
•  Schools		to	implement	more	fully	a	whole	school	
community	approach	
o  Collaborate	more	fully	with	parents	
o  Improve	young	people’s	knowledge	about	cyber-safety	and	coping	strategies	
o  Develop	posi1ve	measures/restora1ve	approaches	
o  Develop	coopera1ve	group	work	
o  Document	procedures	and	outcomes	and	evaluate	their	effec1veness	
o  Establish	links	and	call	on	external	professional	agencies	
•  Teachers		to	take	greater	responsibility	and	embrace	
professional	training		
o  Group	dynamics	
o  Conflict	resolu1on	skills	
o  Technological	skills
Current	Weaknesses	
Requiring	AcFon		
Future	guidelines	need	to	encourage	
	
•  Young	people	to	take	a	leadership	role	to	discourage	cyber-
bullying	
o  Report	/intervene	when	witness	to	cyber-bullying	
o  Seek	advice	and	guidance	from	external	agencies/specialists	
	
•  Parents	to	talk	about	cyber-bullying	to	their	children	
o  Challenge	bystander	apathy	
o  Find	a	balance	between	supervising/	monitoring	online	ac1vity	and	
developing	trust	and	self-discipline	
o  Seek	to		enhance	their	own	digital	skills
“Schools	are	s1ll	struggling	to	produce	good	
policies”	(Smith	et	al.2012).		
Essen1al	requirements:	
1.Provide	adequate	funding,	training	,templates	.		
2.Promote	accountability		by	examining:		
•  Students	and	parents	ahtudes	to	bullying	
•  Level	of	absenteeism	
•  	Drop	-out	rates	
•  	Record	keeping	of	bullying	incidents	and		
•  	Outcomes	of	interven1ons.			
Reward	effec1ve	policy	and	prac1ce	
	Overcoming	Problems	of	Compliance	to	the			
Whole	School	Community	Approach
Cyberbullying:	Outside	of	School			
	To	deal	with	any	confusion,	a	school	should,	in	its	
code	of	behaviour	or	an1-bullying	policy,	make	it	
clear	when	it	will	intervene,	in	terms	of	disciplining	
behaviour	by	students	outside	the	school,	outside	of	
school	hours;	and	that	it	be	consistent	in	enforcing	
such	discipline.			
Clarity	and	consistency	fundamental	for	schools		
in	this	area.	
	
Murray	Smith.(2013).School	Bullying	and	some	Law.	In		O’Moore,M.&Stevens,P.(Eds.)Bullying	in	Irish	
Educa1on,	Cork	University	Press.	
Murray	Smith(2014)	Some	law	on	cyberbullying:	In	O’Moore,M.	Understanding	Cyberbullying,	Dublin,Veritas
Conclusions	
•  Cyber-bullying	is	a	worldwide	problem	
•  Imposes	mental	and	physical	ill	health	
•  Undermines	and	dilutes	the	quality	of	educa1on	
•  Preven1on	and	Interven1on	needs	to	be	systemic	and	collabora1ve	
•  Poli1cal	Ac1on	needed	at	local,	na1onal,	interna1onal	level	
				Framework	for		Preven1on	and	Interven1on		to	Include	
	
Ø  	Mandatory	Whole	School	Community	Approach	
Ø  	Training	of	Professionals----Teachers	&	Health	Care		
Ø  		Media	Campaign	
Ø  		Na1onal	Advisory	Centre/	Commissioner	for	e-Safety	
Ø  		Data	Collec1on	and	Research	
Ø  		Legal	Reform	
Success	will	depend	on	strength	of	poliFcal	will
Go	Raibh	Mile	Maith	Agat	
	
Thank	You

Cyberbullying, #digitalmobbing 06042016 - Mona O´Moore