Research Article
Background:A high prevalence of adolescent dating violence (ADV) has been documented in recent years. However, the majority of ADV studies have been conducted in North America and moreover, ADV studies have primarily focused on high school or college populations.Objective:To investigate victimization and perpetration of ADV and related gender differences in a sample of Danish seventh-grade students.Method:In total, 2934 seventh-grade students (M = 3.5, SD = 0.5) filled out questionnaires at
Sidsel Karsberg,
Rikke Holm Bramsen,
Mathias Lasgaard,
Ask Elklit
Scandinavian Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychology , ISSUE 1, 16–27
research-article
indicate that transgender identity need not disturb reaching adolescent developmental milestones.
Trans youth appear to have more negative sexual experiences such as sexual harassment and dating violence than their mainstream peers (21-23). This has been explained by heterosexism, a cultural tendency to display aggression towards gender and sexual minorities, which serves to maintain traditional male and female roles and the superiority of heterosexuality over other sexualities (24-26). On the other
Elias Heino,
Sari Fröjd,
Mauri Marttunen,
Riittakerttu Kaltiala
Scandinavian Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychology , 166–175
Research Article
DSH, whereas among majority Norwegians sexual abuse (OR, 3.9) and violence (OR, 4.5) were identified as the strongest predictors. Similarly, among boys violence from adults (OR, 8.8) was associated most strongly with DSH, whereas among girls sexual abuse (OR, 4.3) was the most robust predictor. DSHs reported more conflicts with parents, less family support and involvement, and more peer problems than non-DSHs, and DHS girls had more difficulties in these relationships than DHS boys. Only small
Bjørn Reigstad,
Siv Kvernmo
Scandinavian Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychology , ISSUE 3, 92–103
Article
Limei Ma,
Dongmei Zhao,
Yijun Gao,
Chen Zhao
International Journal of Advanced Network, Monitoring and Controls , ISSUE 2, 35–39
Case report
violence exposure.Methods:Detailed psychiatric and neuropsychological assessment was performed initially, followed by a PET study. The PET imaging was carried out in the resting-state and in the dissociative-state.Results:The adolescent was suffering from multiple episodes of unconsciousness, all found to be psychogenic; thus, PNES was diagnosed. However, at the psychopathology symptom level, the adolescent had heightened impulsivity, hyperactivity, hyperarousal, anxiety, somatic, and dissociative
Dejan Stevanovic,
Leposava Brajkovic,
Madhur Kumar Srivastava,
Ivan Krgovic,
Jasna Jancic
Scandinavian Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychology , ISSUE 2, 98–106
Research Article
health.Method:This cross-sectional study is based on structured interviews with 748 adolescents from seven outpatient clinics in Sweden. Chi-squared tests were performed to examine significant differences between gender and victimization (or lack of victimization). The study also included a quantitative content analysis of interview utterances.Results:The analysis showed that more than half of the adolescents had experienced violence or another type of abuse. There are also significant gender differences: two
Mats Anderberg,
Mikael Dahlberg
Scandinavian Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychology , ISSUE 3, 123–131
Research Article
the Trauma Symptom Checklist.Three classes of adolescents were identified on the basis of their exposure to potentially traumatic and negative life events. The baseline class (81.3%) had a low probability of the endorsement of all potentially traumatic and negative life events, except threats of violence and bullying. This group had low scores for post-traumatic symptoms, negative affectivity, and somatization. Class 2 (13.7%) comprised mainly males and had the highest probability of endorsement
Tóra Petersen,
Cherie Armour,
Ask Elklit
Scandinavian Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychology , ISSUE 2, 63–71
Article
exculpation for historical and ongoing state violence and economic theft. It also works to produce the legal borders against which targeted populations experience state violence. The nomopoly then is a critical component of the debtscape, the zone where Australia’s sovereign debt (Giannacopoulos 2017) is disavowed through consent frameworks (colonial laws), which provide license for the colonial state to obfuscate existing evidence of its violent practices and to continue with exploitation and theft.
A
Maria Giannacopoulos
Borderlands , ISSUE 2, 116–136
Research Article
That social networks play a central role in religious life is well accepted by most social scientists. We are reasonably confident, for instance, that they are crucial for the recruitment and retention of members, the diffusion of religious ideas and practices, motivating individuals to volunteer and become politically active, the health and well-being of people of faith, and conflict, radicalization, and (sometimes) violence. However, in conference presentations, journal articles, and books
Sean F. Everton
Journal of Social Structure , ISSUE 1, 1–34
Article
For various reasons individuals in a sample survey may prefer not to confide to the interviewer the correct answers to certain potentially sensitive questions such as the illegal use of drugs, illegal earning, or incidence of acts of domestic violence, etc. In such cases the individuals may elect not to reply at all or to reply with incorrect answers. The resulting evasive answer bias is ordinarily difficult to assess. The use of a randomized response method for estimating the proportion of
Kajal Dihidar,
Manjima Bhattacharya
Statistics in Transition New Series , ISSUE 2, 193–210
Research Article
, violence, inadequate child care and other factors to our children’s learning outcomes.
David Zyngier
Evidence Base , ISSUE 1, 1–24