Skip to main content
×
×
Home
  • Get access
    Check if you have access via personal or institutional login
  • Cited by 1
  • Cited by
    This (lowercase (translateProductType product.productType)) has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by CrossRef.

    Bauwelinck, Mariska Deboosere, Patrick Willaert, Didier and Vandenheede, Hadewijch 2016. Suicide mortality in Belgium at the beginning of the 21st century: differences according to migrant background. The European Journal of Public Health, p. ckw159.

    ×
  • Print publication year: 2007
  • Online publication date: August 2009

3 - Suicide, violence and culture

from Part I - Theoretical background
Summary

EDITORS' INTRODUCTION

Suicide and violence are both culturally determined and influenced. There is considerable evidence that rates of suicide vary dramatically across nations, and cultures deal with these acts in different manners. The relationship between mental illness and suicide also varies. In some cultures, such as China and Sri Lanka, the rates of suicide are very high, but the rates of mental illness among those committing suicide are not. Social factors such as education, employment, high aspirations and poverty, along with stressors such as life events, may play a role. In some societies, the act of suicide remains illegal; therefore it is impossible to get accurate rates of suicide. Violence is related to a number of similar factors and globalization and urbanization may play an important role. Gender differences in suicide and violence vary too.

In this chapter, Tousignant and Laliberté propose that the national and gender differences in suicide and violence are culturally determined. Marital conflicts and relationship problems with in-laws are common causes of domestic violence and dowry deaths are sometimes passed off as suicide or accidental deaths. Embedded within these acts are the gender role and gender-role expectations. Using examples from aboriginal groups for rates of suicide and in Quebec, Tousignant and Laliberté suggest that drug or alcohol problems, along with problems in attachments and problems in relationships and breakdown of relationships, produce inordinate pressure on individuals, which is used as a trigger for seeking a way out. The sociocultural model these authors put forward is important in understanding vulnerability factors, which are more likely to be specific for specific groups.

Recommend this book

Email your librarian or administrator to recommend adding this book to your organisation's collection.

Textbook of Cultural Psychiatry
  • Online ISBN: 9780511543609
  • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511543609
Please enter your name
Please enter a valid email address
Who would you like to send this to *
×
References
Aleem, S. (1994). The Suicide: Problems and Remedies. New Delhi, Ashish.
Allard, Y. E., Wilkins, R. & Berthelot, J.-M. (2004). Mortalité prématurée dans les régions sociosanitaires à forte population autochtone. [Premature deaths in public health divisions with a high aboriginal population]. Rapports sur la santé, 15(1), 55–66.
Bhugra, D, Desai, M. & Baldwin, D. (1999). Attempted suicide in West London: inception rates. Psychological Medicine, 29, 1125–1130.
Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (2003). Injury mortality among American Indian and Alaska Native children and youth – United States 1989–1998. MMWR, 52(30), 697–701.
Chandler, M. J., Lalonde, C. E., Sokol, B. W. & Hallett, D. (2003). Personal persistence, identity development, and suicide: a study of native and non-native North American adolescents. Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 68(2), 1–130.
Coloma, C. (1999). Programme Mikon: La mortalité dans les communautés Atikamekw. Unpublished research report.
Desjarlais, R., Eisenberg, N., Good, B. & Kleinman, A. (1995). World Mental Health: Problems and Priorities in Low-income Countries. New York: Oxford University Press.
Durkheim, E. (1898,1985). Le suicide [Suicide]. Presses universitaires de France.
Grand'Maison, J. & Lefebvre, S. (1993). Une génération bouc émissaire [A scapegoat generation]. Montreal: Fides.
Hezel, F. X. (1984). Cultural patterns in Turkish suicide. Ethnology, 23(3), 193–206.
Hezel, F. X. (1987). Turk suicide epidemic and social change. Human Organization, 46(4), 283–291.
Kahn, M. Z. & Ramji, R. (1984). Dowry death. Indian Journal of Social Work, 45, 303–315.
Laliberté, A. (2006). Un modèle écologique pour mieux comprendre le suicide chez les autochtones : une étude exploratoire [An ecological model to better understand suicide among Aboriginals: an exploratory study. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Quebec in Montreal.
Macpherson, C. & Macpherson, L. (1987). Towards an explanation of recent trends in suicide in Western Samoa. Man, 22, 305–330.
Marecek, J. (1998). Culture, gender, and suicidal behavior in Sri Lanka. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 28, 69–81.
Meer, F. (1976). Race and Suicide in South Africa. International Library of Sociology.
Minturn, L. (1992). Sita's Daughters: Coming out of Purdah. New York: Oxford.
Murphy, H. B. M. (1982). Comparative Psychiatry. Springer, Berlin
Pearson, V. (1995). Goods on which one loses: women and mental health in China. Social Science and Medicine, 41, 1159–1193.
Pearson, V. & Liu, M. (2002). Ling's death: an ethnography of a Chinese woman's suicide. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 32(4), 347–358.
Phillips, M. R., Liu, H. & Zhang, Y. P. (1999). Suicide and social change in China. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, 23, 25–50.
Phillips, M. R., Li, X. & Zhang, Y. (2002). Suicide rates in China, 1995–99. The Lancet, 359(9309), 835–840.
Pouliot, L. & DeLeo, D. (2006). Critical issues in psychological autopsy studies: The need for a standardisation. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior. 36(5), 491–510.
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. (1995). Choosing Life: Special Report on Suicide among Aboriginal People, Ottawa: Canada Communication Group.
Rubinstein, D. H. (1983). Epidemic suicide among Micronesian adolescents. Social Science and Medicine, 10, 657–665.
Rubinstein, D. H. (1987). Cultural patterns and contagion: epidemic suicide among micronesian youth. In Culture, Youth and Suicide in the Pacific: Papers from the East–West Center Conference, ed. Hezel, F. X., Rubenstein, D. H. & White, G. H.. Honolulu, HI: East–West Center, pp. 127–148.
Shneidman, E. S. (2004). Autopsy of a Suicidal Mind. New York: Oxford University Press.
Thakur, U. (1963). The History of Suicide in India. An Introduction. Delhi: Munshi Ram Manohar Lal.
Tousignant, M., Seshadri, S. & Raj, A. (1998). Suicide and gender in India. A multiperspective approach. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 28(1), 50–61.
Waters, A. B. (1999). Domestic dangers: Approaches to women's suicide in contemporary Maharashtra, India. Violence Against Women, 5, 525–547.
WestlakeV. W., N. V. W., N. & May, P., A. (1986) Native American suicide in New Mexico, 1957–1979 : a comparative study. Human Organization, 45(4), 296–309.
World Health Organization (2004). http://www.who.int/mental_health/prevention/suicide/en/Figures_web0604_table.pdf.
World Health Organization (Sept 12, 2006). http://www.who.int/mental_health/prevention/suicide/country_reports/en/.
Zhang, J., Jia, S., Wieczorek, W. F. & Jiang, C. (2002). An overview of suicide research in China. Archives of Suicide Research, 6(2), 167–184.
Zhang, J., Conwell, Y., Zhou, L. & Jiang, C. (2004). Culture, risk factors and suicide in rural China: a psychological autopsy case control study. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 110(6), 430–437.
Zouk, H., Tousignant, M., Séguin, M., Lesage, A. & Turecki, G. (2006). Characterization of impulsivity in suicide completers : clinical, behavioral and psychosocial dimensions. Journal of Affective Disorders, 92, 195–204.