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Original Articles

Is cyberstalking different?

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Pages 627-640 | Published online: 07 Dec 2007
 

Abstract

Very little empirical work exists on cyberstalking. The current study analysed detailed questionnaires completed by 1051 self-defined stalking victims. Almost half (47.5%) reported harassment via the Internet, but only 7.2% of the sample was judged to have been cyberstalked. Ordinal regression analyses of four groups of victims, categorized according to degree of cyber involvement in their victimization, revealed a general picture of similarity between the groups in terms of the stalking process, responses to being stalked, and the effects on victims and third parties. It was concluded that cyberstalking does not fundamentally differ from traditional, proximal stalking, that online harassment does not necessarily hold broad appeal to stalkers, and that those who target ex-intimates remain the most populous stalker type.

Acknowledgements

This work was enabled by a survey conducted jointly by the Network for Surviving Stalking (NSS) and the University of Leicester. Particular thanks are due to the Director of NSS, Tracey Morgan.

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