Introduction
Over the past 20 years, low and middle-income countries have made great strides in increasing access to primary and secondary education, resulting in a growing proportion of children and adolescents now enrolled in school (THE WORLD BANK, 2014). Yet, in many places, the rise in school attendance has not been met with improvements in education quality (UNESCO, 2017). As a result, the global development community and local governments have sought to improve education quality by supporting teacher training, upgrading education facilities, and promoting a safer and more welcoming school environment (UNESCO, 2016).
However, despite efforts to make schools safer, thousands of youths suffer from violence at school or live in fear of being targeted (ELGAR ET AL., 2015; UNESCO, 2017). Bullying is the recurrent and unprovoked aggression between peers (OLWEUS, 1994), and it is one of the most widespread forms of school violence (ELGAR ET AL., 2015). Bullying can be direct aggression in the form of physical (e.g. punching and pushing) or verbal violence (e.g. calling names), or indirect aggression in the form of social exclusion (Wang, Iannotti, and Luk, 2012). Moreover, bullying can also take place online (e.g. cyberstalking) (ESPELAGE, RAO, AND CRAVEN, 2013)
Adolescence (10-19 years) is a period of great social, physical, and psychological change, and it is marked by the emergence of strong peer relationships (VINER ET AL., 2012). Therefore, peer violence, such as bullying, can negatively impact adolescents’ development and well-being (KLJAKOVIC AND HUNT, 2016). For instance, bullying victims are at higher risk of suicide ideation, suicide attempts, and self-harm compared to those who are not bullied (JOHN ET AL., 2018; NIKOLAOU, 2017A; KIM AND LEVENTHAL, 2008). In addition, multi-country, cross-sectional studies have linked frequent bullying victimization to higher odds of having headaches and stomach aches (P. DUE et al., 2005), while both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies have found that bullying victims have higher rates of depression and anxiety (KALTIALA-HEINO ET AL., 2000; VAN DER WAL, DE WIT, AND HIRASING, 2003; GINI AND POZZOLI, 2009; COPELAND ET AL., 2013). Furthermore, the lifelong effects of bullying can extend beyond adolescents’ health by also impacting their educational achievement. Adolescents who are bullied are less likely to feel a sense of belonging to the school community (GLEW ET AL., 2005), have significantly lower math and reading scores (DELPRATO, AKYEAMPONG, AND DUNNEB, 2017), and have a higher likelihood of dropping out of high school (CORNELL ET AL., 2013), compared to non-bullied students.
Latin America
The percentage of adolescents who report having been victims of bullying in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) ranges from 17% in Uruguay to 30% in the Dominican Republic (OECD, 2017). Trends have also varied, and while some countries such as Jamaica, Uruguay, and Trinidad and Tobago have recorded decreases in bullying (UNESCO, 2017), other countries, such as Brazil, have had an increase in self-reported bullying victimization during the same period (MALTA ET AL., 2014; AZEREDO ET AL., 2019).
Similar to their peers around the world, adolescents from LAC countries who experience bullying victimization are also more likely to report mental health problems (BOSA ET AL., 2018). Studies in the region also point that victimization is not equal across groups, and both students with disabilities (VEGA LÓPEZ ET al., 2013) and LQBTQ students tend to be at higher risk of bullying (KOSCIW, 2019).
Bullying is one of the many types of violence youths in the LAC region must navigate daily. In addition, adolescents from LAC countries are exposed to some of the highest rates of violent crime (e.g. assault and homicide) in the world (UNODC, 2015), and are disproportionally affected by interpersonal violence (Global Burden of Disease Pediatrics et AL., 2016). The positive association between bullying aggression during adolescence and violent acts in adulthood (KIM ET AL., 2011), indicates that bullying prevention should be a priority in any comprehensive effort that LAC governments may undertake to decrease overall violence.
Legal Interventions
Emerging research in the United States has linked the enactment of antibullying laws to a reduction in student victimization (NIKOLAOU, 2017b). The development of antibullying laws conveys a clear message that bullying behaviors are unacceptable, raises awareness of the problem, and can help to engage broader society in addressing this problem (NATIONAL ACADEMIES OF SCIENCES AND MEDICINE, 2016; HALL, 2017). Antibullying laws can also promote a more sustained and multi-tiered approach in reducing bullying, which may include a combination of universal preventive efforts (e.g. bullying awareness campaigns) and more targeted interventions (e.g. mental health counseling for aggressors) (NATIONAL ACADEMIES OF SCIENCES AND MEDICINE, 2016).
Research on the content of these laws has been scarce and most studies on school-based antibullying laws have been based on state-level legislation in the United States (HALL, 2017). Nevertheless, emerging studies, along with guidelines established by international organizations such as UNICEF and UNESCO, support a few core legal components including specifications about the scope of application, definition of prohibited behaviors, protocols for when bullying occurs, and preventive measures (HATZENBUEHLER ET AL., 2015; UNESCO, 2017; PLAN INTERNATIONAL AND UNICEF, 2015; HALL, 2017; NATIONAL ACADEMIES OF SCIENCES AND MEDICINE, 2016).
Laws should be explicit as to where, what, and who these rules apply and protect. Antibullying laws should have a clear scope, stating, for example, the types of school (e.g. public, private), grades and locations (e.g. inside the school, outside the school) covered, and second, prohibited bullying behaviors should be explicitly defined (HATZENBUEHLER ET AL., 2015). Moreover, antibullying laws should also enumerate specific protections for groups (e.g. LGBTQ students or students with disabilities) who are at higher risk of being bullied (HALL, 2017).
Antibullying laws should also support schools in dealing with bullying occurrences. Corrective measures for aggressors, for instance, should prioritize restorative approaches, given their potential to improve school climate and to reduce bullying (UNESCO, 2017). The provision of mental health services to both victims and aggressors is also an important step in mitigating the consequences of this negative experience (UNESCO, 2017). Lastly, laws should establish reporting procedures to ensure readily available and confidential means of reporting not only for school staff but for anyone who has witnessed a bullying incident (UNESCO, 2017).
Strategies for bullying prevention (e.g. awareness campaigns and parent engagement) should also be considered as part of a comprehensive antibullying law (NATIONAL ACADEMIES OF SCIENCES AND MEDICINE, 2016). For example, teacher training on how to identify and address bullying is seen as a key aspect of implementing effective antibullying policies (UNESCO, 2017; STUART-CASSEL, BELL, AND SPRINGER, 2011). It is also important that schools develop their own antibullying policies so that preventive measures are tailored to each school context, and administrators feel empowered to act (HATZENBUEHLER ET AL., 2015). Furthermore, general legal components related to implementation, enforcement, evaluation, and monitoring are also important in the context of antibullying laws given their potential to increase the likelihood of adoption and impact of these laws (STUART-CASSEL, BELL, AND SPRINGER, 2011).
Many LAC countries have enacted school-based antibullying laws, policies, and programs in the past ten years to address the problem (DELPRATO, AKYEAMPONG, AND DUNNEB, 2017; TRUCCO, 2017; PLAN INTERNATIONAL AND UNICEF, 2015). Initial efforts, led mainly by international organizations such as UNICEF, have been made to compile these laws and to identify some of their overarching themes (PLAN INTERNATIONAL AND UNICEF, 2015; MORALES AND LÓPEZ, 2019; TRUCCO, 2017). However, these studies tended to employ a more superficial and descriptive approach, as opposed to a systematic assessment of specific legal components. The present study used evidence-based guidelines to compare LAC laws within nine specified domains and to identify gaps and opportunities for the legal landscape in the region. Results should also lay the groundwork for future legal antibullying interventions and impact evaluations across the region.
Methods
A comparative policy analysis was conducted to build a new database to assess important aspects of national antibullying laws for countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. This database was created at the WORLD Policy Analysis Center at the University of California Los Angeles and is available upon request.
Antibullying Database
The database included school-based, antibullying laws, and regulations enacted as stand-alone laws or amendments to existing legislation, up to December 31st, 2018. Laws were classified as school-based if they extended the scope to educational environments using at least one of the following terms: educational center, educational institution, educational unit, school, and school environment. Laws were classified as antibullying if they included terms such as violence among peers, school bullying, school harassment. Since there is no consensus on the Spanish equivalent for the word “bullying” (MARÍN-MARTÍNEZ AND REIDL MARTÍNEZ, 2013), all national, school-based laws containing the words acoso, hostigamiento and matonaje were included in the search strategy.
Sourcing of antibullying laws in the region was informed by systematic online searches, which entailed targeted Google searches using the native language, for all 33 countries in the region. Thorough reviews were carried out for the first three pages of Google results using the sourcing terms listed on the appendices section. Websites from the countries’ national legislative bodies and national education ministries were also searched using the same key search terms. Table 1 contains the eleven laws that met the sourcing criteria established by the authors.
Country | Name | Year | Type |
---|---|---|---|
Argentina | Law 26.892- For the promotion of coexistence and the approach to social conflict in educational institutions | 2013 | National law and resolutions (226/14 and 217/14) |
Bolivia | Law 548- Amendment to the national law on children and adolescents | 2014 | Amendment and regulation (2377) |
Brazil | Law 13.185- Program to combat systematic bullying (bullying) | 2015 | National law |
Law 13.663- Amendment to the general education law | 2018 | Amendment | |
Chile | Law 20.536- Amendment to the general education law, "About school violence" | 2011 | Amendment |
Colombia | Law 1620- The national system of school coexistence and training for the exercise of human rights, education for sexuality and the prevention and mitigation of school violence | 2013 | National law and regulation (1965) |
Costa Rica | Law 9404- For the prevention and establishment of corrective and formative measures against to bullying or bullying | 2016 | National law |
El Salvador | Decree 839- Legal reform of the law of integral protection of children and adolescents | 2017 | National law |
Honduras | Law 96-2014- Against school bullying | 2015 | National law |
Panama | Law 7- That takes measures to prevent, prohibit and punish discriminatory acts and dictates other provisions | 2017 | National law |
Paraguay | Law 4.633- Against school harassment in public educational institutions, private or private subsidized | 2012 | National law and resolution (5766) |
Peru | Law 29.719- That promotes the coexistence without violence in educational institutions | 2011 | National law and regulation (010-2012) |
1No laws were identified for 22 countries in the region
Coding was conducted by two native speakers who coded all legislative texts separately. A third reviewer, also fluent in one of the LAC countries’ local languages, was consulted to resolve a few coding questions.
Analysis and Variables
The present study provides descriptive data on legal components encompassing nine domains; 1) Scope; 2) Bullying Definition; 3) Protected Groups; 4) Reporting; 5) Corrective Measures; 6) Mental Health Support; 7) Preventive Measures; 8) Implementation and Enforcement; and 9) Monitoring and Evaluation. Variables of each domain were informed by U.S.-based studies of state antibullying laws and policies, and guidelines established by international organizations including UNICEF and UNESCO (PLAN INTERNATIONAL AND UNICEF, 2015; UNESCO, 2017; HALL, 2017; HATZENBUEHLER ET AL., 2015). The variable list was adapted to the content and format of LAC national laws to facilitate cross-national comparisons. For example, components of U.S. state laws outlining specific school district obligations (STUART-CASSEL, BELL, AND SPRINGER, 2011) were not included in the present variable list, since organizational structures in the educational system of LAC countries might differ from each other.
Most variables are dichotomous (yes/no). Consistent with previous content analysis of antibullying laws (STUART-CASSEL, BELL, AND SPRINGER, 2011), laws containing explicit language on the variable in question were coded as “yes”. In addition to this, “other” was used to code additional themes that appeared consistently, and “unclear” was used to code the few instances where the legal excerpts were ambiguous.
Results
Out of the 33 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, only eleven (33%) have enacted national antibullying legislation. Among these countries, four enacted stand-alone antibullying laws (Brazil, Costa Rica, Honduras, and Paraguay), while the remaining countries amended existing legislation to include bullying prevention within a broader framework of school violence and/or discrimination prevention. Furthermore, all laws have been enacted within the past 10 years and since 2011 at least one law has been enacted every year.
Scope, Definition, and Protected Groups
Laws from all countries mentioned the type of schools under the scope of application, and all were applicable to both private and public schools [Table 2]. Eight out of the eleven (73%) also included information about the grades subjected to the scope. Within these eight countries, laws from Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, and Paraguay were applicable starting with primary education, and up to secondary education. Laws from Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Peru also included higher education institutions.
Domain | Variable | Ar | Bo | Br | Ch | Co | Cr | El | Ho | Pa | Pr | Pe |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scope | Type of School | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Grade | ✓ | * | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Location | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | |
Bullying Definition | Physical | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Verbal | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Cyber | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | |
Other | ✓1 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓2 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
*Bolivia's law does not specify grade, but states that the law is applicable to all children in the national territory (Art. 4)
1Argentina- Although bullying is not explicitly defined in the law, Article 2 includes online violence as a possible medium in which school violence and harassment can occur. Art. 3 also establishes that schools should be free of physical and psychological violence, which are two forms of school bullying
2Chile- Art. 16 B provides a more general definition of bullying including that it can take place through technological means. However, it does not explicitly describe different forms of bullying.
Most laws included a definition of physical and verbal bullying (82%), which typically consisted of a description of physically aggressive behaviors (e.g. hitting and punching) for the first, and verbally aggressive behaviors (e.g. yelling and calling names) for the second. A description of bullying aggression through electronic means (i.e. cyberbullying) was also present in most legal texts (63%).
Reporting and Corrective Measures
Laws from eight countries (73%) contained information about reporting procedures in case of bullying [Table 3]. In contrast, only laws from three countries (27%) included explicit protections from retaliation for reporting bullying incidents. Although not included in the table, it was noted that laws from Panama and Bolivia also contained information about the consequences of false bullying allegations.
Domain | Variable | Ar | Bo | Br | Ch | Co | Cr | El | Ho | Pa | Pr | Pe |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reporting | Procedures for reporting | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | ✓ |
Protection from retaliation | - | - | - | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | - | - | |
Corrective Measures | Proportional to the offense | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | * | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Age appropriate | - | - | - | - | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | |
Respectful | - | - | - | - | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | |
Educational/ Rehabilitation | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | |
Peaceful Resolution of Conflicts | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | - | - | - | - | - | ✓ |
*El Salvador- Article 89 of this law states more generally that schools' disciplinary measures must be proportional and respectful but does not specify corrective measures in instances of bullying.
Notes:Argentina- Art. 2 mentions respect for dignity in broader terms, but since it was not under the articles about corrective guidelines, it was not coded here.Bolivia- Art. 153 establishes reporting of cases of bullying for reporting adults. No details are provided for students who report bullying.Costa Rica- Art. 24 states that school staff who fails to protect students from retaliation will be sanctioned. This is a less direct way to state that students are protected from retaliation, but it is a mean to safeguard their protection, nevertheless.
Out of the five corrective measures assessed, the most common was that consequences should be proportional to the offense (82%) and to provide an educational and rehabilitative opportunity for aggressors (55%). In contrast, laws from only four countries explicitly stated that corrective measures should be tailored to students’ age or development stage and be focused on the peaceful resolution of conflicts. Moreover, laws from three countries (27%) explicitly stated that corrective measures should be respectful of aggressors’ either physical or psychological integrity.
The Peruvian antibullying law “29719 que Promueve la Convivencia Sin Violencia en las Instituciones Educativas en Perú (2012)”, was the only law to include all five corrective measure guidelines. The following excerpt from this law was used to code the corrective measures from Table 3:
Article 15. · Criteria applicable to corrective measures
For the purposes of this Regulation, all corrective measures directed at students must be:
Clear and timely.
Repairing and training.
Respectful of the development stage of the students.
Pertinent to pedagogical development.
Respectful of the physical, psychological, and moral integrity of the students.
Proportional to the fault committed.
Established formally by the educational community and adapted to the conditions and needs of the students.
Respectful of the rights of children, girls, adolescents, and human rights
Related to the promotion of the Democratic Coexistence.
Consistent, fair and impartial, that do not depend on the state of mind of those who apply the corrective measures.
Article 16. · Objective of the corrective measures
The corrective measures must allow the students to reflect and learn from the lived experience, for which it is necessary to have the participation and commitment of the mothers, fathers and legal guardians, in order to contribute to their integral formation and Democratic coexistence in the educational institution.
Mental Health Support and Preventive Measures
Mental health services for victims were explicitly included in the laws from four countries (36%) and laws from five countries (46%) included these services for bullying aggressors as well [Table 4]. Laws from Argentina, Panama, and Paraguay contained more general language about support and counseling for students involved in bullying but did not explicitly state that these services included mental health counseling. These cases were coded as “other”.
Domain | Variable | Ar | Bo | Br | Ch | Co | Cr | El | Ho | Pa | Pr | Pe |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mental Health Support | Aggressor Counseling | Other1 | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | ✓ | Other1 | ✓ |
Victim Counseling | Other1 | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | Other1 | Other1 | ✓ | |
Preventive Measures | School Staff Training | ✓ | Unclear2 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | - | ✓ | ✓ |
Public Campaigns | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | |
Parental Involvement | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | - | ✓ |
1Argentina, Panama and Paraguay- Laws in these three countries have provisions establishing that those involved in bullying (which for the purpose of this analysis is assumed to include both victims and aggressors) should have access to specialized support or professional assistance. However, the laws do not explicitly state whether these teams provide mental health counselling more specifically.
2Bolivia-Part III of art. 152 includes the organization and provision of training program aimed at bullying prevention, however it is not clear for whom the training is intended (e.g. students, school staff, etc.).
Note: Colombia- Art. 33 states that those "affected" by bullying will receive mental health attention. This was interpreted as both victims and aggressors for coding purposes.
Except for El Salvador, laws from all countries explicitly included at least one strategy to prevent bullying. The most common prevention component was the promotion of peaceful coexistence measures (e.g. peaceful resolution of conflict) (82%). School staff training and the creation of public awareness campaigns were included in 64% of the countries’ laws. Parental involvement was explicitly included in 55% of the laws.
Implementation and Enforcement, and Monitoring and Evaluation
Laws from all countries included provisions for the development of school-specific policies or activities to address bullying [Table 5]. The following example from the Bolivian law “Código Niña, Niño y Adolescente (2014)” exemplifies the legal text used to code this variable:
Domain | Variable | Ar | Bo | Br | Ch | Co | Cr | El | Ho | Pa | Pr | Pe | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Implementation and Enforcement | School-specific policies/activities | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Implementation responsibility | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Funding | - | - | - | - | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Enforcement responsibility | - | - | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Non-compliance sanctions | - | - | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | ||
Monitoring and Evaluation | At least one component of the law evaluated | - | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | |
Systematic bullying data collection | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | - | ✓ |
Article 152. (PREVENTIVE MEASURES AND PROTECTION IN THE EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM).
I. In order to prevent, stop and eliminate violence, aggression and / or bullying in educational units and / or centers, the following collective actions are established that the educational community will adopt:
d) Develop a peaceful and harmonious Coexistence Plan, according to the reality of each educational unit and / or center;
(...)
II. The Peaceful and Harmonious Coexistence Plan will be mandatory for each of the educational units and / or centers, and must be prepared by the higher authorities, in a participatory and plural open process, which mandatorily convene all the members of the educational community, within the framework of the Political Constitution of the State, international treaties and conventions on rights and guarantees of girls, boys and adolescents, according to the regulations.
All laws, except for the Salvadorian legislation, also addressed which entities or people were responsible for implementing at least one component of the law, 64% explicitly outlined entities responsible for enforcement, and 55% listed sanctions in cases of failure to comply. In addition, less than half included any mention of funding of at least one of the components of the law (33%).
Compared to the implementation and enforcement domain, laws from fewer countries included explicit information on monitoring and evaluation. Only laws in five countries (45%) outlined a requirement to evaluate at least one component of the law, while six (55%) established that bullying data had to be systematically collected. Some variation was also noted at the level in which bullying prevalence data was supposed to be collected and compiled ranging from the school to the national levels.
Discussion
Laws from eleven countries in the LAC region met the present study’s inclusion criteria and provided protections to youths in some of the most populous countries in the region, such as Brazil and Colombia. Furthermore, since 2011 at least one new law has been enacted every year, indicating a rising awareness of the problem and growing demand for legislative solutions. Notably, Mexico, the second-most populous country in the region, had not enacted a national antibullying law at the time the database was created, and antibullying legislation in the country has been restricted to the state level (DIPUTADOS, 2013).
Despite a growing understanding of bullying and its potential impact on youth, most LAC countries (67%) still lack national legislation. Moreover, different patterns emerged between Central America, South America, and the Caribbean. Most laws reviewed were enacted in South American countries, whereas no Caribbean country has adopted an antibullying law, according to this study’s inclusion criteria. In contrast to Caribbean nations, antibullying legislation in Central and South America has been steadily increasing over the past ten years. In addition to bullying specific laws, recent analysis indicates that countries in Latin America are also pursuing laws and programs to more broadly support a peaceful school environment (MORALES AND LÓPEZ, 2019).
The present study contains both encouraging findings, and some gaps and challenges. On a promising note, all legislative texts reviewed included some aspect of three evidence-based components (Hatzenbuehler et al., 2015) (albeit with varying levels of detail); 1) a statement of scope; 2) a description of prohibited bullying behaviors; and 3) the requirement for schools to develop antibullying policies. These legal components are important because, as researchers have noted, they provide school administrators specificity and clarity to address bullying at the schools (HATZENBUEHLER ET AL., 2015).
The degree of legislative detail varied across domains. First, 46% of the laws did not explicitly determine whether incidents of student bullying outside the school were covered by the scope of the law. Establishing whether antibullying laws encompass aggressive behaviors outside the school is important especially because cyberbullying can take place anywhere.
The analysis also indicated that cyberbullying was explicitly included in fewer laws compared to physical bullying. Country-wide school closures in the region, due to the COVID-19 pandemic (UNESCO, 2020) have forced students to spend more time online to study and socialize, while also having less adult supervision as parents and caregivers need to meet work from home demands. Growth in internet access and social media use in the LAC region (ECLAC, 2016) will present new opportunities for online bullying and harassment. LAC governments should seriously consider cyberbullying as an intrinsic part of all bullying prevention activities. Besides, governments must pay close attention to how cyberbullying during the pandemic might further exacerbate the negative effects of prolonged social distancing and lack of in-person education on youths’ mental health and development.
Unlike cyberbullying, physical bullying was generally defined across all laws, and the behaviors used to describe it were consistent across laws, possibly indicating a cross-national consensus around bullying at its most commonly understood form. Two countries, Brazil and Costa Rica also included sexual violence as a form of bullying. This example suggests that although the definition of bullying may differ across countries, the variety of bullying forms present in the laws indicates that regional understanding of the topic goes beyond simple physical aggression and acknowledges the complexity of behaviors that can be categorized as bullying.
Another common component across laws called for schools to develop antibullying policies. The development of such policies allows the tailoring of antibullying prevention to each school context (STUART-CASSEL, BELL, AND SPRINGER, 2011). The process of developing these policies can also raise awareness about the problem among school staff and the larger school community, and possibly facilitate the implementation process.
It is also encouraging to note that many laws had a multicomponent approach, where both universal preventive approaches (e.g. schoolwide awareness campaigns) and interventions reaching select students (e.g. mental health counseling) were integrated as part of a multi-tiered preventive framework often recommended by experts (National Academies of Sciences and Medicine, 2016). Furthermore, preventive approaches often went beyond public antibullying campaigns, to include school staff training and parental participation in the prevention toolkit.
Four important gaps stood out. First, few laws included a list of protected groups. Second, a limited number of laws protected students from retaliation for reporting bullying, with two laws adding possible sanctions for false reporting. Third corrective measures, when present, often lacked detail about specific services and protections for both victims and aggressors. Fourth, provisions that can support the implementation of the laws, such as sanctions for noncompliance and evaluation processes, were absent from many laws.
Only laws from three countries (27%) explicitly included a list of protected groups. These figures are in line with U.S. state laws, where a 2011 review concluded that only 37% of states had laws that enumerate higher vulnerability groups (STUART-CASSEL, BELL, AND SPRINGER, 2011). Nevertheless, the addition of protected groups is a growing trend in the U.S. (WINBURN, WINBURN, AND NIEMEYER, 2014) due to emerging research linking explicit protections to lower rates of bullying victimization (HALL, 2017). However, the adoption of explicit protections may be hindered by a lack of political consensus as the discussion to add protected groups to existing antibullying laws has been fractured along party lines in the U.S. (WINBURN, WINBURN, AND NIEMEYER, 2014). This impasse may also be a problem in some LAC countries such as Brazil, where the federal government has shown increasing animosity towards minority groups such as the LGBTQ community, and Belize and Guyana, where LBGTQ rights are still limited (CORRALES, 2015).
Explicit mention of bullying reporting procedures was included in the laws from eight countries (73%). Yet, most laws offered few specifics regarding the reporting processes. Moreover, some laws only mention reporting means (i.e. by phone or in-person), while others only address reporting from certain individuals (e.g. parents). This finding stands in contrast to expert recommendations that call for convenient and confidential means of reporting not only for school staff but for anyone who has witnessed a bullying incident (UNESCO, 2017). It was also observed that laws from both Panama and Bolivia, also contained information about possible consequences against false allegations of bullying. These provisions could place an unfair onus on victims and make them less likely to report bullying incidents.
A wide variation in the level of detail was noted in the corrective measures domain, a finding in line with previous reviews of U.S. antibullying laws (STUART-CASSEL, BELL, AND SPRINGER, 2011). Most laws included at least one measure assessed, and the Peruvian law included all five. One potential reason is that these disciplinary measures are more likely to be part of individual schools’ policies than delineated by national legislation. Nevertheless, future legislation on the topic needs to explicitly state safeguards for aggressors to ensure that disciplinary measures are restorative and help to re-integrate those students into the academic community.
Most laws also did not explicitly include access to psychological counseling for either victims or aggressors. These services are key to support students’ coping skills and to mitigate the potential long-term effects of bullying experiences (STUART-CASSEL, BELL, AND SPRINGER, 2011). In the context of LAC countries, the provision of these services may be particularly difficult for students in public schools, even in countries where this safeguard exists (AZEREDO ET AL., 2019). Public schools in the region are often under-resourced and tasked with educating youths with fewer means to access psychological support privately (OECD, 2017). Therefore, ensuring that students across all types of schools and socioeconomic backgrounds have access to the appropriate support services can help to address not only bullying but also to alleviate the social and health inequalities in the region.
This study also noted an absence of explicit sanctions for noncompliance and legal provisions related to monitoring and evaluation. A lack of sanctions for non-compliance can undermine antibullying laws as there are few consequences to schools that fail to protect youths. Monitoring and evaluation provisions are also key to iterating and revising antibullying laws in order to make them more effective and to measure their impact.
It is important to mention two limitations of the present study. First, the database does not include norms, decrees, or programs issued by national governments or by administrative agencies such as ministries of education. State, district, and municipal legislation were not examined at this time either. In addition, this study did not assess the implementation of existing laws. Despite these limitations, documentation and examination of national-level legislation offer an important framework moving forward. Based on the information compiled, future studies can assess whether the enactment of antibullying laws has had a positive impact on the prevalence of school bullying. Furthermore, these studies can investigate, more specifically, which legal components are more meaningful in reducing bullying victimization.
The present study also highlighted some key opportunities moving forward. Lawmakers in the region should consider including explicit protections for vulnerable groups, such as LGBTQ students and those with disabilities, ensuring accessible and confidential reporting of bullying incidents and providing more details on corrective measure guidelines. Antibullying laws should also have provisions detailing sanctions for noncompliance and evaluation mechanisms to assess their effectiveness. These changes could facilitate the adoption of these laws and to ultimately create a positive impact on students’ safety and well-being.