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1. Are there negative cycles of peer victimization and rejection sensitivity? Testing ri-CLPMs in two longitudinal samples of young adolescents.

2. Students' School and Psychological Adjustment in Classrooms with Positive and Negative Leaders.

3. Benefits of Bullying? A Test of the Evolutionary Hypothesis in Three Cohorts.

4. Bullying and Victimization Trajectories in the First Years of Secondary Education: Implications for Status and Affection.

5. Disparities in Persistent Victimization and Associated Internalizing Symptoms for Heterosexual Versus Sexual Minority Youth.

6. Caught in a vicious cycle? Explaining bidirectional spillover between parent-child relationships and peer victimization.

7. The Interplay of Adolescents' Aggression and Victimization with Friendship and Antipathy Networks within an Educational Prosocial Intervention.

8. Peer victimization in single-grade and multigrade classrooms.

9. Associations between overweight and mental health problems among adolescents, and the mediating role of victimization.

10. Self, peer, and teacher reports of victim-aggressor networks in kindergartens.

11. Why Does a Universal Anti-Bullying Program Not Help All Children? Explaining Persistent Victimization During an Intervention.

12. Defending one's friends, not one's enemies: A social network analysis of children's defending, friendship, and dislike relationships using XPNet.

13. How Competent are Adolescent Bullying Perpetrators and Victims in Mastering Normative Developmental Tasks in Early Adulthood?

14. Defending victims: What does it take to intervene in bullying and how is it rewarded by peers?

15. The Intensity of Victimization: Associations with Children's Psychosocial Well-Being and Social Standing in the Classroom.

16. Multifinality of peer victimization: maladjustment patterns and transitions from early to mid-adolescence.

17. Peer and self-reported victimization: Do non-victimized students give victimization nominations to classmates who are self-reported victims?

18. Peer dislike and victimisation in pathways from ADHD symptoms to depression.

19. Preschool Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity and Oppositional Defiant Problems as Antecedents of School Bullying.

20. Teacher characteristics and peer victimization in elementary schools: a classroom-level perspective.

21. Victims, bullies, and their defenders: a longitudinal study of the coevolution of positive and negative networks.

22. Dopamine receptor D4 gene moderates the effect of positive and negative peer experiences on later delinquency: the Tracking Adolescents' Individual Lives Survey study.

23. Behind bullying and defending: same-sex and other-sex relations and their associations with acceptance and rejection.

24. Being bullied by same- versus other-sex peers: does it matter for adolescent victims?

25. Same- and other-sex victimization: are the risk factors similar?

26. Prevalence of bullying and victimization among children in early elementary school: do family and school neighbourhood socioeconomic status matter?

27. Testing three explanations of the emergence of weapon carrying in peer context: the roles of aggression, victimization, and the social network.

28. Early risk factors for being a bully, victim, or bully/victim in late elementary and early secondary education. The longitudinal TRAILS study.

29. The complex relation between bullying, victimization, acceptance, and rejection: giving special attention to status, affection, and sex differences.

30. Victimization and suicide ideation in the TRAILS study: specific vulnerabilities of victims.

31. The dyadic nature of bullying and victimization: testing a dual-perspective theory.

32. Bullying and victimization in elementary schools: a comparison of bullies, victims, bully/victims, and uninvolved preadolescents.

33. A Large-Scale Replication of the Effectiveness of the KiVa Antibullying Program: a Randomized Controlled Trial in the Netherlands.

34. The support group approach in the Dutch KiVa anti-bullying programme: effects on victimisation, defending and wellbeing at school.

35. Victims, bullies, and their defenders: A longitudinal study of the coevolution of positive and negative networks.

36. “It must be me” or “It could be them?”: The impact of the social network position of bullies and victims on victims’ adjustment.

37. Victims and their defenders: A dyadic approach.

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