RT Article T1 LGBTQ+ Bullying and Cyberbullying: Beyond Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity JF Victims & offenders VO 19 IS 3 SP 491 OP 512 A1 Ojeda, Mónica 1988- A2 Elipe, Paz A2 Del Rey, Rosario LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1885901550 AB LGBTQ+ bullying has a serious impact on young people’s well-being. Many studies have analyzed this phenomenon in terms of the sexual orientation and/or gender identity of the victim, or taking just homophobic aggression into account. This view over-simplifies and limits our understanding of the phenomenon. The present study analyzes, exhaustively, in 2552 adolescents, the prevalence of both general and LGBTQ+ bullying and cyberbullying in accordance with age, assigned sex, gender identity, sexual orientation and gender expression. The results highlight the need to avoid general approaches and to consider the full spectrum of Affective-Sexual, Bodily, and Gender Diversity, given the differences that exist in the risk of victimization and cybervictimization among LGBTQ+ students. They also underscore the importance of taking these differences into consideration in order to design effective prevention and intervention strategies. K1 gender expression K1 Gender Identity K1 Sexual Orientation K1 Cyberbullying K1 Bullying DO 10.1080/15564886.2023.2182855