POSITIVISTS believe society can be
studied scientifically. Science
develops laws to explain observed
patterns. DURKHEIM argued that
there are patterns in suicide & their
social causes could be discovered.
SUICIDE RATES AS SOCIAL FACTS
In DURKHEIM'S view, behaviour is caused by
social facts - forces found in the structure of
society. Social facts are external to
individuals; they constrain individuals,
shaping their behaviour, & are greater than
individuals - they exist on a different 'level'.
For DURKHEIM, the suicide rate is a social
fact.
Using official statistics for various
European countries, DURKHEIM
found that:
Different societies have different rates.
Within a society, rates varied between
social groups; e.g. Catholics had lower
rates than Protestants.
For DURKHEIM, such patterns
show that suicide rates are the
result of 2 social facts:
Social integration - how far individuals
experience a sense of belonging to a
group.
Moral regulation - how
far individuals' actions
are kept in check by
norms.
DURKHEIM'S TYPOLOGY OF SUICIDE
This gives 4 types of suicide:
Egotistic suicide (too little integration); e.g. Catholics
have a lower rate than Protestants because they are
more tightly integrated by shared ritual.
Altruistic suicide (too much
integration), where it is the individual's
duty to die for the good of the group;
e.g. Japanese kamikaze pilots.
Anomic suicide (too little
regulation), where society's
norms become unclear or
outdated by rapid change, e.g.
economic booms & slumps.
Fatalistic suicide (too much regulation),
where society controls individuals
completely, e.g. slaves & prisoners.
Different types of society have different types of suicide:
In modern societies,
individualism is more
important, causing
egoistic suicides, while
rapid change produces
anomic suicides.
In traditional societies, the group is more
important, causing altruistic suicides.
Individuals have rigidly ascribed statuses,
causing fatalistic suicides.
INTERPRETIVISM & SUICIDE
Rather than focus on the causes of
suicide as POSITIVISTS do,
INTERPRETIVISTS focus on its
meanings for those involved - the
deceased, coroners, relatives etc.
DOUGLAS: INTERACTIONISM & SUICIDE
DOUGLAS takes an INTERACTIONIST
approach. He is interested in the
meaning of suicide for the deceased, &
the way coroners label deaths.
Suicide statistics -
DOUGLAS rejects
DURKHEIM'S use of
statistics.
They are not social facts, as
DURKHEIM believes, but social
constructs, based on coroners'
interpretations of deaths &
influenced by other actors, e.g.
family members.
Actors' meanings & qualitative
data - DURKHEIM ignores the
meanings of the act.
We must classify suicides according to their meaning for the deceased.
To do so, DOUGLAS uses qualitative data: suicide
notes, diaries, interviews w/ survivors & relatives.
He believes this will give us a better idea of the real
rate of suicide than official statistics.
ATKINSON: ETHNOMETHODOLOGY & SUICIDE
ATKINSON argues that
social reality is simply a
construct of its members.
ATKINSON agrees w/ DOUGLAS that
statistics are merely the result of
coroners' interpretations.
Disagrees w/ DURKHEIM that we can find
the deceased's meanings & discover the real
rate, since neither researchers nor coroners
can classify deaths objectively. All we can
study is how coroners come to classify a
death as a suicide.
ATKINSON concludes that coroners have a commonsense
theory about the typical suicide. They take the following as
clues indicating suicidal intent & use them to reach a
verdict of suicide: a suicide note or suicide threats; mode of
death, e.g. hanging is seen as 'typically suicidal'; location &
circumstances, e.g. shooting in a deserted lay-by; life
history e.g. mental illness.
TAYLOR: REALISM & SUICIDE
TAYLOR agrees w/ INTERPRETIVISTS
that coroners' theories influence their
verdicts, so statistics are not valid.
Accepts the POSITIVIST view that we can discover
the underlying cause of suicide. he uses case studies
to discover the meanings that cause suicide.
TAYLOR identifies 4 types of suicide, based on the individual's certainty or uncertainty about themselves or others:
Submissive suicide - involves
certainty about oneself.
Sacrifice suicide - involves certainty about others.
Thanatation suicide - involves uncertainty about oneself.
Appeal suicide - involves uncertainty about others.