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The need to belong as motive for (cyber)bullying and aggressive behavior among immigrant adolescents in Cyprus

Abstract

Peer group integration is a crucial acculturative goal for immigrant adolescents who, in order to reach this goal, may use bullying and/or aggressive behavior. The present study aims to explore the underlying aggression motives by investigating the importance of three motives (anger, power, and affiliation) for five different forms of aggressive behavior (bullying, cyberbullying, physical, verbal, and relational aggression) in three groups of adolescents (non‐immigrants, first‐generation and second‐generation immigrants) in Cyprus. The sample consists of 507 non‐immigrant Greek Cypriots, 149 first‐generation and 93 second‐generation immigrants (age M = 16.1, SD = 0.39; range 15–19; 52% female). Data was collected via validated self‐report scales. In line with our hypotheses, latent means and covariances structure (MACS) models revealed that the affiliation motive was a stronger predictor for all five forms of aggressive behavior among first‐generation immigrant adolescents indicating that the need to belong is especially important for their acculturation. The practical importance of these findings for better integrating newcomer immigrants in schools and aggression prevention are discussed.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 05/27/2021 | Link to this post on IFP |
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