Suicide and Social Justice
New Perspectives on the Politics of Suicide and Suicide Prevention
Ian Marsh editor Mark E Button editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:21st Nov '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£34.99(9781138601840)
Suicide and Social Justice unites diverse scholarly and social justice perspectives on the international problem of suicide and suicidal behavior.
With a focus on social justice, the book seeks to understand the complex interactions between individual and group experiences with suicidality and various social pathologies, including inequality, intergenerational poverty, racism, sexism, and homophobia. Chapters investigate the underlying and often overlooked connections that link rising rates and disproportionate concentrations of suicide within specific populations to wider social, political, and economic conditions.
This edited volume brings diverse scholarly and social justice perspectives to bear on the problem of suicide and suicidal behavior, equipping researchers and practitioners with the knowledge they need to fundamentally rethink suicide and suicide prevention.
"Finally—a book that examines the growing suicide crisis from a social justice perspective that powerfully disrupts traditional assumptions and frameworks. This timely book provides an exceptional body of critical knowledge by highlighting the importance of understanding the effects of social, political, and economic forces on human pain and suffering that can make life unliveable. The unique multidisciplinary scholarship throughout the volume is brilliant, rigorous, thoughtful, and encourages the reader to reflect on the social systemic factors involved in the modern suicide epidemic. The essays within this collection are life-saving. Suicide and Social Justice is essential reading for anyone, and everyone, concerned with the public health crisis of the century." — Heidi Rimke, PhD, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Winnipeg
"This volume is an important, compelling and original contribution to the emerging field of critical suicide studies. By providing a diverse range of perspectives on the connection between suicide and social justice, the authors set out new and vital ways to approach and understand suicide. The book challenges many conventional views and approaches to the issue of suicide by cogently and carefully showing how suicide must be framed through the lens of inequality and social justice. Only by such an approach, in my view, will it be possible to critically and meaningfully engage with suicide prevention in a realistic, experiential and holistic manner. Nothing could be more urgent." — Baden Offord, Director and Dr Haruhisa Handa Chair of Human Rights, Centre for Human Rights Education, Curtin University
"Mark E. Button and Ian Marsh have woven together an impressive assemblage of practitioners, persons directly impacted by suicide, and academics, connected in solidarity with a collective ethics for justice doing. These tenacious authors/activists challenge the very descriptions used to express suffering and offer emergent, just practices, rich critiques, alternative critical analysis of how the harms of suicide are caused and framed, and ways to better respond with dignity, justice, liberation, and hope." — Vikki Reynolds, PhD, Activist, Therapeutic Supervisor, and Adjunct Professor
"Finally—a book that examines the growing suicide crisis from a social justice perspective that powerfully disrupts traditional assumptions and frameworks. This timely book provides an exceptional body of critical knowledge by highlighting the importance of understanding the effects of social, political, and economic forces on human pain and suffering that can make life unliveable. The unique multidisciplinary scholarship throughout the volume is brilliant, rigorous, thoughtful, and encourages the reader to reflect on the social systemic factors involved in the modern suicide epidemic. The essays within this collection are life-saving. Suicide and Social Justice is essential reading for anyone, and everyone, concerned with the public health crisis of the century." — Heidi Rimke, PhD, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Winnipeg
"This volume is an important, compelling and original contribution to the emerging field of critical suicide studies. By providing a diverse range of perspectives on the connection between suicide and social justice, the authors set out new and vital ways to approach and understand suicide. The book challenges many conventional views and approaches to the issue of suicide by cogently and carefully showing how suicide must be framed through the lens of inequality and social justice. Only by such an approach, in my view, will it be possible to critically and meaningfully engage with suicide prevention in a realistic, experiential and holistic manner. Nothing could be more urgent." — Baden Offord, Director and Dr Haruhisa Handa Chair of Human Rights, Centre for Human Rights Education, Curtin University
"Mark E. Button and Ian Marsh have woven together an impressive assemblage of practitioners, persons directly impacted by suicide, and academics, connected in solidarity with a collective ethics for justice doing. These tenacious authors/activists challenge the very descriptions used to express suffering and offer emergent, just practices, rich critiques, alternative critical analysis of how the harms of suicide are caused and framed, and ways to better respond with dignity, justice, liberation, and hope." — Vikki Reynolds, PhD, Activist, Therapeutic Supervisor, and Adjunct Professor
ISBN: 9781138601833
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 590g
220 pages