Child and Adolescent Online Risk Exposure
An Ecological Perspective
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Product details:
- Publisher Elsevier Science
- Date of Publication 24 November 2020
- ISBN 9780128174999
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages472 pages
- Size 228x152 mm
- Weight 750 g
- Language English 115
Categories
Long description:
Child and Adolescent Online Risk Exposure: An Ecological Perspective focuses on online risks and outcomes for children and adolescents using an ecological perspective (i.e., the intersection of individuals in relevant contexts) for a better understanding of risks associated with the youth online experience. The book examines the specific consequences of online risks for youth and demonstrates how to develop effective and sensitive interventions and policies. Sections discuss why online risks are important, individual and contextual factors, different types of risk, online risks among special populations, such as LGBT youth, physically or intellectually disabled youth, and ethnic and religious minorities, and intervention efforts.
MoreTable of Contents:
Preface
Section I: Introduction
1. Introduction
Lawrence B. Schiamberg and Michelle F. Wright
Section II: Types of Online Risks
2. Problematic internet use: causes, consequences, and future directions
Michelle F. Wright, Tali Heiman and Dorit Olenik-Shemesh
3. The process of exploitation and victimization of adolescents in digital environments: the contribution of authenticity and self-exploration
John D. Ranney
4. Online contact risk behaviors and risk factors among Japanese high school students
Ikuko Aoyama
5. Understanding child and adolescent cyberbullying
Oonagh L. Steer, Peter J.R. Macaulay and Lucy R. Betts
6. Online aggression and romantic relationships in adolescence
Chelsea Olson and Amy Bellmore
7. The longitudinal associations of cyberbullying and cybervictimization: preliminary findings from a two-wave study
Fatih Bayraktar and Michelle F. Wright
8. The rising threat of cyberhate for young people around the globe
Sheri Bauman, Vanessa M. Perry and Sebastian Wachs
9. Same incident, different story? Investigating early adolescents' negative online peer interactions from different perspectives
Sara Pabian, Sara Erreygers, Kathleen Van Royen and Heidi Vandebosch
Section III: Special Populations and Online Risks
10. Parental vigilance, low self-control, and Internet dependency among rural adolescents
Magda Javakhishvili and Alexander T. Vazsonyi
11. Cyberbullying perpetration and victimization among ethnic minority youth in the United States: similarities or differences across groups?
Guadalupe Espinoza and Fardusa Rashid Ismail
12. Racial and ethnic diversity in the social ecology of online harassment and cybervictimization: the adolescent school context
Gia Elise Barboza and Lawrence B. Schiamberg
13. Cyberbullying and cybervictimization among youth with disabilities
Morgan A. Eldridge, Michelle L. Kilpatrick Demaray, Jonathan D. Emmons and Logan N. Riffle
14. The negative online experiences of maltreated children and adolescents
Michelle F. Wright
15. LGBTQ youth and digital media: online risks
Tyler Hatchel, Cagil Torgal, America J. El Sheikh, Luz E. Robinson, Alberto Valido and Dorothy L. Espelage
16. Gendered nature of digital abuse in romantic relationships in adolescence
Beatriz Vï¿1⁄2llora, Santiago Yubero, Elisa Larraï¿1⁄2aga and Raï¿1⁄2l Navarro
Section IV: Interventions and Policies
17. Advances in the cyberbullying literature: theory-based interventions
Christopher P. Barlett, Matthew M. Simmers and Luke W. Seyfert
18. Online risk interventions: implications of theory of mind and other considerations
Tina Montreuil and Hagit Malikin
19. Using focus groups and quality circles to enable pupil voice in European teenagers from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds
Noel Purdy, Jayne Hamilton, Peter K. Smith, Catherine Culbert, Herbert Scheithauer, Nora Fiedler, Antonella Brighi, Consuelo Mameli, Annalisa Guarini, Damiano Menin, Trijntje Vï¿1⁄2llink and Roy A. Willems
20. Conclusion
Michelle F. Wright and Lawrence B. Schiamberg