Over the past few weeks, we received many requests from high school students and teachers to provide information on whether criminal law should be developed to cover bullying. This seems to be a topic of discussion at this year's national high school. Since we discussed this issue on this blog, I would like readers (and discussers) who are interested to point out information that might be useful in determining their position on this issue. First of all, if you are interested in this topic we encourage you to check out the following blogs we published in the past few years.
Next, there is a fact sheet that provides valuable information such as the following.
Please take some time to explore many other resources on our website (and other sites) to build a view based on information on cyber bullying and appropriate correspondence. Law based on research is just a multifaceted approach. We believe that criminal sanctions should be reserved only for the most serious affairs. As pointed out in the above documents, many states are developing regulations in books that apply to the worst form of electronic harassment. So, do we need new laws? That is a problem
Lucky - I believe that I can get more valuable information from this important conversation.
After reading sources 1 and 2, cyber bullying should be part of the US criminal law. Both sources indicate that cyber bullying should be sufficient for US criminal law. Bullying is wrong and should be a crime. What happens when bullying occurs frequently? Source 1 provides many good reasons why cyber bullying should be the US criminal law. In Part 1 and Part 2 of fact 1 source 1, if a teenager accesses the Internet and uses social networks, they say that they are more likely to suffer from cyber bullying. Young people can not get up on their own, so I fully agree. Another example I found on Source 1 is Fifth in the facts part as well. This fact suggests that bullying may cause psychological harm. I think this is the most important fact. People and children live their lives due to someone's cyber bullying
Source 2 shows several reasons why cyber bullying should be the US criminal law. Source 2 of the last paragraph states that there are reports of bullying in every 50 states. It's not just about dealing with people who are bullying, but for anyone, the problem is not to reduce that increase. Another reason why cyber bullying should be the criminal law is that in paragraph 4 the people refer to the Internet rather than the people behind the keyboard and thus show how people do what about cyber bullying It is from. That is correct, the reason why the Internet is a bad place for children is not for the internet itself, but someone treats it as a bad place.
Over the past few weeks, we received many requests from high school students and teachers to provide information on whether criminal law should be developed to cover bullying. This seems to be a topic of discussion at this year's national high school. Since we discussed this issue on this blog, I would like readers (and discussers) who are interested to point out information that might be useful in determining their position on this issue. First of all, if you are interested in this topic we encourage you to check out the following blogs we published in the past few years.