
@article{ref1,
title="The sociology of suicide",
journal="Annual review of sociology",
year="2011",
author="Wray, M. and Colen, C. and Pescosolido, B.",
volume="37",
number="",
pages="505-528",
abstract="Since Durkheim's classic work on suicide, sociological attention to understanding the roots of self-destruction has been inconsistent. In this review, we use three historical periods of interest (pre-Durkheim, Durkheim, post-Durkheim) to organize basic findings in the body of sociological knowledge regarding suicide. Much of the twentieth-century research focused on issues of integration and regulation, imitation, and the social construction of suicide rates. Innovations in the twenty-first-century resurgence of sociological research on suicide are described in detail. These newer studies begin to redirect theory and analysis toward a focus on ethnoracial subgroups, individual-level phenomena (e.g., ideation), and age-period-cohort effects. Our analysis of sociology's contributions, limits, and possibilities leads to a recognition of the need to break through bifurcations in individual-and aggregate-level studies, to pursue the translation of Durkheim's original theory into a network perspective as one avenue of guiding micro-macro research, and to attend to the complexity in both multidisciplinary explanations and pragmatic interventions. © 2011 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0360-0572",
doi="10.1146/annurev-soc-081309-150058",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-soc-081309-150058"
}