University of Toronto, Canada.
Health (London). 2022 Jan;26(1):100-119. doi: 10.1177/13634593211046845. Epub 2021 Sep 13.
This paper considers how Indigenous studies can inform the evolution of critical research on suicide. Aligned with critiques of mainstream suicidology, these methodological approaches provide a roadmap for structural analysis of complex systems and logics in which the phenomenon of suicide emerges. Moving beyond mere naming of social determinants of suicide and consistent with calls for a theory of justice within suicide research, Indigenous studies helps to advance conceptual knowledge of suicide in descriptive means and enhance ethical responses to suicide beyond psychocentric domains. Through centering Indigenous theories of affect, biosociality, and land-based relations, this article examines what new knowledge of suicide can emerge, as well as what ethical responses are possible to suicide and to a world where suicide exists. This new knowledge can inform practices for critical suicide studies which are invested in resisting structural violence, nourish agency, dignity and freedom for those living and dying in often-unlivable presents, and enhancing livability for individuals, communities, and the environment living under shadows of empire. Implications for theory, ethics, and suicide research and prevention practice are considered.
这篇论文探讨了本土研究如何为批判性自杀研究的发展提供信息。这些方法与主流自杀学的批评观点一致,为复杂系统的结构分析以及自杀现象出现的逻辑提供了路线图。超越对自杀的社会决定因素的简单命名,并且符合在自杀研究中提出正义理论的呼吁,本土研究有助于以描述性的方式推进对自杀的概念性知识,并超越心理中心主义领域对自杀做出伦理回应。通过关注本土的情感、生物社会性和基于土地的关系理论,本文探讨了可以出现哪些关于自杀的新知识,以及对于自杀以及存在自杀的世界可以采取哪些可能的伦理回应。这种新知识可以为批判性自杀研究的实践提供信息,这些实践致力于抵制结构性暴力,为那些在常常难以生存的当下生活和死亡的人赋予能动性、尊严和自由,并提高个人、社区和在帝国阴影下生活的环境的宜居性。本文考虑了对理论、伦理和自杀研究和预防实践的影响。