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Intrapersonal and interpersonal risk factors for peer victimization in immigrant youth in Finland
Authors:Strohmeier Dagmar  Kärnä Antti  Salmivalli Christina
Affiliation:Faculty of Psychology, Institute of Economic Psychology, Educational Psychology and Evaluation, University of Vienna, Universitaetsstrasse 7, 1010 Wien, Austria. dagmar.strohmeier@univie.ac.at
Abstract:This study (a) compared native Finns and immigrant children with respect to different forms of peer victimization and (b) tested whether intrapersonal (e.g., depression) and interpersonal (e.g., peer rejection) sample was drawn from the first phase of a large intervention evaluation project, KiVa, in Finland, composed of 4,957 native Finns (51% girls), 146 first-generation immigrants (48% girls), and 310 second-generation immigrants (53% girls) 9 to 12 years of age. The concurrent data included self- and peer reports collected via Internet-based questionnaires. Compared with native youth, first- and second-generation immigrants were more often targets of both peer- and self-reported victimization. Both immigrant groups experienced higher levels of physical, racist, and sexual victimization than natives. Furthermore, second-generation immigrants reported higher levels of property damage, threats, and cybervictimization than native Finns. Significant indirect effects were found between immigrant status and victimization. Interpersonal but not intrapersonal risk factors helped to explain these associations.
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