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Template:Bullying

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Bullying
Types
  • Abusive supervision
  • Cyberbullying
  • Disability bullying
  • Displaced aggression
  • Doxing
  • LGBTQ bullying
  • Hazing
  • Military bullying
  • Mobbing
  • Parental bullying of children
  • Peer victimization
  • Prison bullying
  • Rank
  • Relational aggression
  • School bullying
    • Higher education
  • Sexual bullying
  • Workplace harassment
  • Workplace bullying
    • Academia
    • Information technology
    • Legal aspects
    • Legal profession
    • Medicine
    • Nursing
    • Teaching
    • Toxic leader
  • Toxic workplace
Elements
  • Betrayal
  • Blacklisting
  • Bullying and emotional intelligence
  • Cancel culture
  • Character assassination
  • Coercion
  • Culture of fear
  • Defamation
  • Destabilisation
  • Discrediting
  • Embarrassment
  • False accusation
  • Gaslighting
  • Gossip
  • Harassment
  • Humiliation
  • Incivility
  • Intimidation
  • Kiss up kick down
  • Mind games
  • Moving the goalposts
  • Nagging
  • Name calling
  • Personal attacks
  • Physical abuse
  • Psychological abuse
  • Rudeness
  • Sarcasm
  • Screaming
  • Shame
  • Smear campaign
  • Social exclusion
  • Social undermining
  • Swatting
  • Taunting
  • Workplace incivility
  • Verbal abuse
Organizations
  • Ban Bossy
  • Bullying UK
  • Bystander Revolution
  • Canadian Centre for Gender and Sexual Diversity
  • Ditch the Label
  • GRIN Campaign
  • It Gets Better Project
  • Kidscape
  • Megan Meier Foundation
  • Society Against Violence in Education
Experts
Academics
  • Anna Costanza Baldry
  • Wendy Craig
  • Dorothy Espelage
  • David P. Farrington
  • Shelley Hymel
  • Heinz Leymann
  • Gary Namie
  • James O'Higgins Norman
  • Dan Olweus
  • Debra Pepler
  • Christina Salmivalli
  • Kenneth Westhues
Activists
  • Andrea Adams
  • Tim Field
  • SuEllen Fried
  • Liam Hackett
  • Lizzie Velásquez
Actions
  • Anti-Bullying Day
  • Anti-Bullying Week
  • Anti-bullying legislation
  • International Day of Pink
  • International Stand Up to Bullying Day
  • Think Before You Speak
  • School shooting
Notable suicides
(List)
  • William Arthur Gibbs (1877)
  • Kelly Yeomans (1997)
  • Hamed Nastoh (2000)
  • Dawn-Marie Wesley (2000)
  • Nicola Ann Raphael (2001)
  • Ryan Halligan (2003)
  • Megan Meier (2006)
  • Sladjana Vidovic (2008)
  • Phoebe Prince (2010)
  • Tyler Clementi (2010)
  • Jamey Rodemeyer (2011)
  • Jamie Hubley (2011)
  • Kenneth Weishuhn (2012)
  • Audrie Pott (2012)
  • Amanda Todd (2012)
  • Jadin Bell (2013)
  • Rehtaeh Parsons (2013)
  • Rebecca Sedwick (2013)
  • Leelah Alcorn (2014)
  • Conrad Roy (2014)
  • Tyrone Unsworth (2016)
  • Lia Smith (2025)
Murder–suicides
(incidents)
  • Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold
    • Columbine, 1999
  • Jeff Weise
    • Red Lake, 2005
  • Seung-Hui Cho
    • Virginia Tech, 2007
  • Pekka-Eric Auvinen
    • Jokela High School, 2007
  • Matti Juhani Saari
    • Kauhajoki School of Hospitality, 2008
  • Jose Horacio Reyes
    • Sparks Middle School, 2013
  • Elliot Rodger
    • Isla Vista, 2014
Related topics
  • Emotional blackmail
  • Just-world fallacy
  • List of LGBT-related suicides
  • Machiavellianism in the workplace
  • Narcissism in the workplace
  • Personal boundaries
  • Personality disorders
  • Playing the victim
  • Psychopathy in the workplace
  • Scapegoating
  • Self-esteem
  • Social dominance orientation
  • Suicide among LGBTQ people
  • Victim blaming
  • Victimisation
  • Victimology
Template documentationviewedithistorypurge
This template does not display in the mobile view of Wikipedia; it is desktop only. See Template:Navbox visibility for a brief explanation.

This is a navigational template created using {{navbox}}. It can be transcluded on pages by placing {{Bullying}} below the standard article appendices and above categories.

Initial visibility

edit

This template's initial visibility currently defaults to collapsed, meaning that it is hidden apart from its title bar.

To change this template's initial visibility, the |state= parameter may be used:

  • {{Bullying|state=expanded}} will show the template expanded, i.e. fully visible.
  • {{Bullying|state=autocollapse}} will show the template autocollapsed, i.e. if there is another collapsible item on the page (a navbox, sidebar, or table with the collapsible attribute), it is hidden apart from its title bar, but if not, it is fully visible.

Templates using the classes class=navbox ({{navbox}}) or class=nomobile ({{sidebar}}) are not displayed in article space on the mobile web site of English Wikipedia. Mobile page views accounted for 60% to 70% of all page views from 2020 through 2025. Briefly, these templates are not included in articles because 1) they are not well designed for mobile, and 2) they significantly increase page sizes—bad for mobile downloads—in a way that is not useful for the mobile use case. You can review/watch phab:T124168 for further discussion.

TemplateData

edit

A navigational box that can be placed at the bottom of articles.

Template parameters[Edit template data]

ParameterDescriptionTypeStatus
Statestate

The initial visibility of the navbox

Suggested values
collapsed expanded autocollapse
Stringsuggested

Template transclusions

edit
Transclusion maintenance
Check completeness of transclusions
The above documentation is transcluded from Template:Navbox documentation. (edit | history)
Editors can experiment in this template's sandbox (edit | diff) and testcases (create) pages.
Subpages of this template.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Bullying&oldid=1339292950"