To Ignore, to Join in, or to Intervene? Contextual and Individual Factors Influencing Cyber Bystanders' Response to Cyberbullying Incidents. [PDF]
Arató N, Németh L, Macaulay PJR.
europepmc +1 more source
Who Is the System? On the Externalisation and Depersonalisation of Responsibility for Abuse
ABSTRACT This article examines the externalisation and depersonalisation of responsibility in the institutional communication of the Roman Catholic Church in the context of sexualised violence. Niklas Luhmann's theory of social systems is used to show how semantic constructions such as ‘systemic causes’ rhetorically blur responsibility and contribute ...
Thomas Kron
wiley +1 more source
University Students’ Awareness and Willingness to Intervene: Bystander Response to Peer Suicidal Risk in Kyrgyzstan [PDF]
Leila Salimova +2 more
openalex +1 more source
How situations are defined is a social process. This paper examines how users on YouTube make sense of the alleged sexual assault perpetrated by shock rocker Marilyn Manson in the 2007 “Heart Shaped‐Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand)” music video.
Stacey Hannem, Christopher J. Schneider
wiley +1 more source
Regional disparities and temporal trends in pre-hospital management of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Thailand: a multi-center retrospective cohort study (2017-2023). [PDF]
Piankusol C +8 more
europepmc +1 more source
Nyau masked dancers embodying a variety of people, animals, and objects appear at many public events in Chewa areas of Malawi. Understood to be the physical manifestation of ancestral spirits, these entities are classified as ‘not human’ and transgress ordinary morality, mocking and threatening audiences.
Sam Farrell
wiley +1 more source
Bystander Efforts and 1‐Year Outcomes in Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest
K. Kragholm +15 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Activation phenotypes defined by the coordinated expression of activation markers discriminate TCR-mediated and bystander T cell responses. [PDF]
Schenk TJC +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Scandalisation, gender and space in ancient Rome: The case of Cicero and Clodia
Abstract This article analyses the public attack on Clodia Metelli, a Roman aristocratic woman, by the orator Marcus Tullius Cicero in a trial in 56 BCE. Drawing on modern scandal theory, this article analyses how Cicero uses scandal dynamics to turn Clodia, the witness in the case, into the culprit.
Muriel Moser
wiley +1 more source

