Attending to difference in Indigenous people's experiences of cyberbullying: toward a research agenda

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Abstract

Broadly understood as repeated, intentional, and aggressive behaviors facilitated by digital technologies, cyberbullying has been identified as a significant public health concern in Australia. However, there have been critical debates about the theoretical and methodological assumptions of cyberbullying research. On the whole, this research has demonstrated an aversion to accounting for context, difference, and complexity. This insensitivity to difference is evident in the absence of nuanced accounts of Indigenous people's experiences of cyberbullying. In this chapter, we extend recent critiques of dominant approaches to cyberbullying research and argue for novel theoretical and methodological engagements with Indigenous people's experiences of cyberbullying. We review a range of literature that unpacks the many ways that social, cultural, and political life is different for Indigenous peoples. More specifically, we demonstrate there are good reasons to assume that online conflict is different for Indigenous peoples, due to diverse cultural practices and the broader political context of settler-colonialism. We argue that the standardization of scholarly approaches to cyberbullying is delimiting its ability to attend to social difference in online conflict, and we join calls for more theoretically rigorous, targeted, difference-sensitive studies into bullying.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Emerald international handbook of technology-facilitated violence and abuse
EditorsJane Bailey, Asher Flynn, Nicola Henry
Place of PublicationBingley, UK
PublisherEmerald Group Publishing
Chapter8
Pages145-163
Number of pages19
ISBN (Electronic)9781839828485
ISBN (Print)9781839828492
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Bibliographical note

Copyright the Author(s) 2021. Version archived for private and non-commercial use with the permission of the author/s and according to publisher conditions. For further rights please contact the publisher.

Keywords

  • bullying
  • cyberbullying
  • Indigenous
  • social media
  • technology
  • violence

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