Staff and prisoner perceptions of physical and social environmental factors thought to be supportive of bullying : the role of bullying and fear of bullying

Matthew D. Allison, Jane L. Ireland

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    18 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The current study explored the relationship between social and physical environmental factors supportive of bullying, levels of bullying and fear of bullying. Participants were 261 adult male prisoners. All completed the Direct and Indirect Prisoner Checklist-Scaled Version Revised (DIPC-SCALED-r ©Ireland, 2007), the Prison Environment Scale (PES ©Allison, 2007), and a Brief Measure of Fear of Bullying Scale (BMFBS). The PES was explored initially using 100 male prisoners randomly selected from the main sample and 100 prison officers. It was predicted that increased bullying would be associated with increased evidence of environmental factors supportive of bullying; that increased levels of fear of bullying would be associated with increased evidence of environmental factors supportive of bullying; and that actual experience of bullying would represent better predictors of fear levels than the presence of environmental factors supportive of bullying. Those perceiving greater levels of environmental factors reported more fear of bullying and more behaviours indicative of bullying (perpetration and victimisation), with this holding for indirect and direct behaviours indicative of bullying. Bullying behaviours (direct perpetration and indirect victimisation) predicted fear of bullying more than the presence of environmental factors. The environmental factor of rules, regulations and security were found to predict bullying perpetration.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)43-51
    Number of pages9
    JournalInternational Journal of Law and Psychiatry
    Volume33
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2010

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