Bullying in the military
In 2000, the UK Ministry of Defence (MOD) defined bullying as: "...the use of physical strength or the abuse of authority to intimidate or victimise others, or to give unlawful punishments."[1] A review of a number of deaths, supposedly by suicide, at Princess Royal Barracks, Deepcut by Nicholas Blake QC indicated that whilst a bullying culture existed during the mid to late 1990s many of the issues were being addressed as a result of the Defence Training Review.[2]
Some[who?] argue that this behaviour should be allowed because of a general academic consensus that "soldiering" is different from other occupations. Soldiers expected to risk their lives should, according to them, develop strength of body and spirit to accept bullying.[3]
In some countries, ritual hazing amongst recruits has been tolerated and even lauded as a rite of passage that builds character and toughness; while in others, systematic bullying of lower-ranking, young or physically slight recruits may in fact be encouraged by military policy, either tacitly or overtly (see dedovshchina).[citation needed]
See also
- Military
- Military abuse
References
- ^ The Values and Standards of the British Army – A Guide to Soldiers, Ministry of Defence, UK March 2000, paragraph 23.
- ^ Deepcut Review Archived December 9, 2006, at the Wayback Machine accessed 14 January 2007
- ^ Social Psychology of the Individual Soldier, Jean M. Callaghan and Franz Kernic 2003 Armed Forces and International Security: Global Trends and Issues, Lit Verlag, Munster
External links
- Field T Bullying, harassment and suicide in the military armed services
- Film leads to Army bullying probe BBC News 2 August 2005
- Russian army bullying 'horrific' BBC News 20 October 2004
- Brazil army probes torture video BBC News 15 November 2005
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- Abusive supervision
- Cyberbullying
- Disability bullying
- Displaced aggression
- Doxing
- LGBT bullying
- Hazing
- Military bullying
- Mobbing
- Parental bullying of children
- Peer victimization
- Prison bullying
- Rank
- Relational aggression
- School bullying
- Sexual bullying
- Workplace harassment
- Workplace bullying
- Toxic workplace
- Betrayal
- Blacklisting
- Bullying and emotional intelligence
- Cancel culture
- Character assassination
- Coercion
- Culture of fear
- Defamation
- Destabilisation
- Discrediting
- Embarrassment
- False accusation
- Gaslighting
- Gossip
- Harassment
- Humiliation
- Incivility
- Intimidation
- Isolation
- Kiss up kick down
- Mind games
- Moving the goalposts
- Nagging
- Name calling
- Personal attacks
- Physical abuse
- Psychological abuse
- Rudeness
- Sarcasm
- Screaming
- Shame
- Smear campaign
- Social exclusion
- Social undermining
- Swatting
- Taunting
- Workplace incivility
- Verbal abuse
Academics | |
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Activists |
(List)
- William Arthur Gibbs (1877)
- Kelly Yeomans (1997)
- Hamed Nastoh (2000)
- Dawn-Marie Wesley (2000)
- Nicola Ann Raphael (2001)
- Ryan Halligan (2003)
- Megan Meier (2006)
- Sladjana Vidovic (2008)
- Phoebe Prince (2010)
- Tyler Clementi (2010)
- Jamey Rodemeyer (2011)
- Jamie Hubley (2011)
- Kenneth Weishuhn (2012)
- Audrie Pott (2012)
- Amanda Todd (2012)
- Jadin Bell (2013)
- Rehtaeh Parsons (2013)
- Rebecca Sedwick (2013)
- Leelah Alcorn (2014)
- Conrad Roy (2014)
- Tyrone Unsworth (2016)
(incidents)
- Emotional blackmail
- Just-world hypothesis
- List of LGBT-related suicides
- Machiavellianism in the workplace
- Narcissism in the workplace
- Personal boundaries
- Personality disorders
- Playing the victim
- Psychopathy in the workplace
- Scapegoating
- Self-esteem
- Social dominance orientation
- Suicide among LGBT youth
- Victim blaming
- Victimisation
- Victimology
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