Repository logo
Communities & Collections
All of DSpace
  • English
  • العربية
  • বাংলা
  • Català
  • Čeština
  • Deutsch
  • Ελληνικά
  • Español
  • Suomi
  • Français
  • Gàidhlig
  • हिंदी
  • Magyar
  • Italiano
  • Қазақ
  • Latviešu
  • Nederlands
  • Polski
  • Português
  • Português do Brasil
  • Srpski (lat)
  • Српски
  • Svenska
  • Türkçe
  • Yкраї́нська
  • Tiếng Việt
Log In
New user? Click here to register. Have you forgotten your password?
  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Lidberg, Johan"

Filter results by typing the first few letters
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Results Per Page
  • Sort Options
  • No Thumbnail Available
    Item
    Long-Term Outcomes of Bullying Victimization With a Specific Focus on Emerging Adulthood and Resilience
    (University of Gothenburg / Göteborgs universitet, 2022) Lidberg, Johan; Department of Psychology / Psykologiska institutionen
    Bullying victimization in school is not only an experience at the time of victimization; the impact of these experiences has been found to be connected to long-term outcomes well into adulthood. The overall aim of this licentiate thesis is to broaden the understanding of long-term outcomes from experiencing bullying victimization in school, related to the developmental period of emerging adulthood and how it can be understood in terms of resilience. It includes two studies with participants recruited from the longitudinal study MoS (Mobbning och Skola [Bullying and School]). More specifically, Study I investigated how a sample of emerging adults (nine women and six men, Mage=29.00, SD=0.37), subjected to bullying victimization in school and suffering from poor psychological health in emerging adulthood, described their victimization experiences and perceived long-term consequences of these experiences. The findings revealed experiences of a long duration of victimization, problems adjusting to the bullying, experiences of not receiving help from school personnel, and depression, anxiety, and even suicidal thoughts at the time of victimization. In terms of long-term outcomes, the emerging adults perceived feelings of insecurity; actively avoiding social situations; an identity formed into viewing oneself as worthless; and body image problems. Together, the long-term consequences they described were found to have the potential to impair their developmental processes in emerging adulthood. Study II investigated how resilience was manifested in the experiences of a group of emerging adults (ten men and five women, Mage=29.13, SD=0.52) with good psychological health despite experiences of childhood bullying victimization. Interviews were deductively analysed using concepts from the framework of resilience: protective factors, promotive factors, outcomes, and resilience as a dynamic process over time. In relation to the concept of protective factors, it was found that the participants had used whatever means possible in handling the victimization. The findings regarding the concept of promotive factors revealed that they had sources of social support who were prepared to help. The coding concept of outcomes revealed that these emerging adults were not only well adjusted but had also been able to use their victimization experiences to help others. In relation to the concept of resilience as a dynamic process over time, it was found that experiences of handling the victimization were perceived as learning experiences that could be used in difficult situations as emerging adults. These findings indicate that resilience in relation to experiences of bullying victimization is best understood as a dynamic process over time, whereby the individual interacts with their environment in an adaptive process, leading to positive development over time. In sum, this licentiate thesis highlights the dynamic process between bullying victimization in school and long-term outcomes related to these experiences.
  • No Thumbnail Available
    Item
    Navigating Emerging Adulthood with the Experience of Being Bullied in School
    (2023-03-08) Lidberg, Johan
    The overall aim of this thesis is to broaden the understanding of long-term outcomes of experiencing bullying victimization in school, related to the developmental period of emerging adulthood as well as how it can be under-stood in terms of resilience and outcomes of body-related concerns. Study I investigated how 15 emerging adults (Mage=29.00, SD=0.37), subjected to bullying victimization in school and suffering from poor psychological health in emerging adulthood, described their victimization experiences and perceived long-term outcomes of these experiences. The findings related to the time of victimization revealed a long duration of victimization, problems adjusting to the bullying; experiences of not receiving help from school per-sonnel; and depression, anxiety and even suicidal thoughts. The perceived long-term outcomes were: feelings of insecurity; actively avoiding social situations; an identity of viewing oneself as worthless; and body image prob-lems. Together, the long-term negative outcomes were found to have the potential to impair the developmental processes in emerging adulthood. Study II investigated how resilience was manifested in the experiences of 15 emerging adults (Mage=29.13, SD=0.52) with good psychological health despite experiences of childhood bullying victimization. Interviews were analysed, first deductively and then inductively, using concepts from resili-ence: protective factors and resilience as a dynamic process over time. The findings showed that the participants exhibited agency in handling the vic-timization, and that they had resources of social support who were prepared to help. As emerging adults the participants had been able to use their vic-timization experiences to help others, and perceived their experiences of handling the victimization as learning experiences that could be used in dif-ficult situations as emerging adults. These findings indicate that resilience in relation to experiences of bullying victimization is best understood as an evolving process, whereby the individual interacts with their environment in an adaptive process, leading to positive development over time. Study III investigated the association between being bullied in school and body-related concerns – body esteem, body shame and body-ideal internalization – in emerging adulthood. The sample comprised 502 individuals (304 wom-en and 198 men) who had participated in a longitudinal study when they were 10, 14 and 28 years old. The results showed that emerging adults who had been subjected to bullying victimization in school at age 10 and/or 14 had a poorer view of their general appearance and weight; they also reported more body shame than non-victimized emerging adults did. The results show that negative experiences of one’s body and appearance are still an active agent of negative influence in emerging adults nearly two decades after they were subjected to bullying victimization in school. Taken together, the three studies in this thesis point to the importance of understanding how experi-ences of bullying in school are related to the period of emerging adulthood, a time of both challenges and opportunities. This can help us better understand how experiences of being bullied in school can come to be translated into problems later in life, with body-related concerns being an overlooked but important aspect of how experiences of bullying victimization can be en-graved on a body that one has learnt to hate and reject. Furthermore, the studies in this thesis indicate that exposure to bullying in school is depend-ent on the context in which it occurs. Social support from both school and home as well as other social contexts outside school must be recognized as the potential resilience-building structures they are in preventing bullying victimization experiences from leading to negative long-term outcomes.
  • No Thumbnail Available
    Item
    The International Freedom of Information Index. A Watchdog of Transparency in Practice
    (Nordic Council of Ministers, Nordicom, 2009-05) Lidberg, Johan; Carlsson, Ulla; School of Media, Communication and Culture, Murdoch University, Perth
    During the past two decades, the number of countries that have enacted Freedom of Information (FOI) laws has increased dramatically. In many respects, FOI laws have become a democratic ‘right of passage’. No FOI, no ‘proper’ democracy. The promises of FOI regimes are far-reaching: extensive independent access to govern - ment-held information will lead to increased transparency, prevention of corruption and maladministration and greater public participation in the political process. But are these promises borne out by the practice of FOI? This article describes a study that tracked a number of real-life FOI requests in five countries. The project puts forward a prototype for the first International Freedom of Information Index, ranking the five countries of study on how their FOI regimes function in practice. In conclusion, the paper suggest that the FOI Index should be expanded to cover all 65 plus countries that have implemented FOI laws. It is argued that such an index could play an important role in furthering some of the core properties of liberal democracy: transparency, political accountability and good governance.

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2025 LYRASIS

  • Privacy policy
  • End User Agreement
  • Send Feedback