Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 44
pro vyhledávání: '"Byongook Moon"'
Autor:
Byongook Moon, John McCluskey
Publikováno v:
Victims & Offenders. :1-16
Publikováno v:
Journal of Developmental and Life-Course Criminology. 8:75-95
Publikováno v:
Victims & Offenders. 18:607-622
Publikováno v:
Journal of School Violence. 19:406-420
A growing body of empirical research on teacher victimization indicates that it is widespread and yields negative consequences. However, limited research has investigated the relationship between t...
Publikováno v:
Aggressive Behavior. 45:517-526
Prior research indicates that student aggression against teachers is widespread, and it has negative impacts on victimized teachers' emotional and physical well-being and job performance. However, little is known about the relationship between the re
Autor:
Merry Morash, Byongook Moon
Publikováno v:
Crime & Delinquency. 63:731-756
Few tests of General Strain Theory (GST) have examined the relative effects of objective and subjective strains on delinquency and the mediating effects of situational-based negative emotions linking strains to delinquency. With a sample of approxima
Publikováno v:
Journal of interpersonal violence. 36(13-14)
Research indicates that violence against teachers has detrimental negative effects on teachers’ emotional and physical well-being, connectedness to school, job performance, and retention. However, no quantitative empirical research has been conduct
Autor:
Merry Morash, Byongook Moon
Publikováno v:
Youth & Society. 49:484-504
The present study of 659 Korean adolescents tests General Strain Theory’s (GST) utility in explaining gender differences in delinquency causation. It models the effects of key strains, negative emotions, and a composite measure of several condition
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology. 60:1327-1343
The present research uses data from the 2010 Korean National Criminal Victimization Survey to examine gender differences in larceny victimization and in predictors of victimization (i.e., target attractiveness, exposure to potential offenders, target