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Journal Article

Citation

Tetteh A, Awaah F, Addo D. J. Aggress. Confl. Peace Res. 2023; 15(2): 163-180.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

10.1108/JACPR-06-2022-0726

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

PURPOSE This study aims to investigate students' perceptions regarding the causes and effects of cyberbullying among university students. The study also establishes whether or not there would be statistically significant differences among cyberbullying victims, perpetrators, victim-perpetrators and bystanders in their thoughts on the causes and effects of cyberbullying on students' social lives from a developing country perspective.

DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH This study uses quantitative approach and cross-sectional survey design to collect primary data from 1,374 undergraduate students sampled from selected public universities in Ghana. Descriptive statistics and analysis of variance analyses were carried out using statistical package for the social sciences.

FINDINGS The study reports popularity among friends, extortion, retaliation, stress, trauma and low self-esteem as causes of cyberbullying. Also, cyberbullying resulted in difficulty trusting people, low self-esteem and increased stress. The study also found statistically significant differences among cyberbullying victims, perpetrators, victim-perpetrators and bystanders in their thoughts on the causes and effects of cyberbullying on students' social lives. Practical implications The study's findings imply that cyberbullying has some fairly significant negative effects on students' lives in Ghana and must be taken more seriously. Conditions must be created to ensure that perpetrators and victims are given the support needed to curb this menace. Detailed remediating measures are provided in the study.

ORIGINALITY/VALUE This paper contributes to the existing literature by studying cyberbullying perceptions among students from a relatively bully-tolerant culture.


Language: en

Keywords

Cyberbullying; Cyberbullying causes; Cyberbullying classifications; Cyberbullying effects; Developing economies; Ghana; Higher education; Online; Students’ perception

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