Sacrifice (bullying) of a fellow is an emotional or physical injury in that age group (Sercombe and Donelly 499).
Homosexuals - Mueller et al. Homosexuals are harmed by their colleagues and the probability of committing suicide is two to three times higher. They can talk, dress up or act, so they will be targeted. 93% of teenagers are also listening to derogatory words about gender (simplified letters). Teenagers surveyed heard such words every day at school.
People with mental disorders - Children with disabilities are likely to become victims of bullying. For example, I report that over half of 62% of students with autism spectrum disorder are being bullied more than once a week ("bullying, disability, mental health" Queensland state government). People with mental disorders are targeted due to lack of cognitive abilities, noise or wheelchair sitting
People who are overweight - fellow victims think it's fun to make fun of "obese" students
Students of certain races and religions - victims of fellows want to make racist jokes and anger others. They tried insulting various races such as African Americans and Easter in the Middle East. African Americans are called "N" because they are criticized for their skin color. Middle Eastern people stereotyped as terrorists
An average and non-rebellious ordinary student - sometimes students are calm and bullied to be harmless. Fellow victims pick this student and feel better. Because they are not discreet people, these victims will not counterattack. These people have a calm face naturally, and you will not notice this if they are concerned about their colleagues.
Studies of fellow's victimization come from two major research areas, "bullying chain" and "peer chain", identified by Seely, Tombari, Bennett & Dunkle (2009). The damage of "bullying act" is focused on the cause of the withdrawal of the victim from the school, catastrophic adverse effect when others adapt. Colleague relationship chains are more quantitatively oriented and we examine fundamental factors related to colleague's victimization and negative outcome and pay special attention to factors that regulate the relationship between them. As interest in peer sacrifice in psychology research is already quite close, most researchers seem to incorporate other areas of research and modern applied theory into the context of peer sacrifice.
In this article, the authors explain recent studies on the sacrifice of early childhood colleagues and their impact on mental health. They begin with the definition of the work sacrificed by their colleagues. And distinguish them from fatal school violence and simple conflict between colleagues. They then present a psychosocial profile of young people who are long-term victims of harassment, especially focusing on their mental health problems. In order to help understand the plight of the victim, the authors compared their situation with the situation of bullying and bullies with bullying and victim characteristics and teenagers. Unanswered questions from Pier's victims -