I'll just add that the health behaviour survey of children and youth that's funded by the Public Health Agency of Canada is run in 42 different countries. If we look at how Canada did in the last round on the prevalence of bullying, we're in the bottom third. That's bad, by the way. That means we have the highest rates.
The countries that have the lowest rates of bullying are much those you've described—the Scandinavian countries, Norway, Finland, Sweden. What do they all have in common? They all have a national campaign that takes a systemic approach that's designed to involve the children who are victimized, the parents, the teachers, and the communities, and to provide each level of the system with skills. These countries with low rates of bullying and victimization say that bullying is a problem that, yes, happens at school, but it's a community and a society problem. That is the effective kind of approach, and it works. They have the lowest rates.