Cyber victimization within the Routine Activity Theory Framework in the Digital Age

Authors

  • Solbey Morillo Puente Universidad de Medellin https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2129-1121

    Doctora en Educación de la Universidad de Los Andes (ULA-Mérida, Venezuela). Profesora de tiempo completo de la Universidad de Medellin. Dirección postal: Carrera 87 N° 30-65 Medellín – Colombia.
    Contacto: smorillo@udem.edu.co

  • Iván Neftalí Ríos Hernández Universidad de Medellín https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3926-8480

    Posdoctoral en Comunicación por la Universidad Austral de Buenos Aires, Argentina. Doctor en Comunicación Social por la Universidad Pompeu Fabra de Barcelona, España. Profesor Auxiliar de la Universidad de Medellín, Colombia. Dirección postal: Carrera 87 N° 30-65 Medellín – Colombia.
    Contacto: irios@udem.edu.co. 

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/psico.202201.009

Keywords:

Cyber victimization, Routine activity theory, Exposure to motivated offender, Suitable target, Capable guardian

Abstract

This quantitative-based research determined whether the routine activity theory influences cyber victimization. To measure the dimensions of the theory, defined as exposure to a motivated offender, suitable online target, and absence of a capable guardian, a valid and reliable questionnaire was used. The cyber victimization questionnaire developed by Álvarez-García, Dobarro, and Núñez was applied to 1,285 students selected at random from schools in Colombia. Findings: 46% are identified as exposed to a motivated offender, 37.5% are suitable online targets, and 29.8% have no capable guardians. The interdependence of these three elements revealed that 3.9% of students are at risk due to their routine activities, which had a significant influence on cyber victimization. It is proposed that these findings should be considered in the design of communicative and educational policies aimed at a responsible use of technologies.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2022-01-03

How to Cite

Morillo Puente, S., & Ríos Hernández, I. N. (2022). Cyber victimization within the Routine Activity Theory Framework in the Digital Age. Revista De Psicología, 40(1), 265–291. https://doi.org/10.18800/psico.202201.009

Issue

Section

Articles