Table of contents | |
Suicide | |
Durkheim's Approach to Evaluating Suicide Rates | |
The Four Types of Suicide | |
Suicide Rates and Social Reform |
He emphasized that these individual reasons are not part of the social current itself and, therefore, do not help in understanding the broader sociological factors at play.
Durkheim's theory of suicide becomes clearer when we examine the connection between the types of suicide and his two social facts: integration and regulation. Integration refers to the strength of an individual's attachment to society, while regulation pertains to the level of external constraint imposed on individuals. Durkheim considered these factors as continuous variables, suggesting that suicide rates increase when either integration or regulation is too low or too high. This leads to the identification of four types of suicide:
Definition: Egoistic suicide is characterized by a lack of integration between the individual and the larger social unit.
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Definition: Altruistic suicide occurs when individuals are compelled to take their own lives due to excessively strong social integration.
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Definition: Anomic suicide is more likely to occur when societal regulation is disrupted, leading to dissatisfaction among individuals due to a lack of control over their passions.
Key Points:
Definition: Fatalistic suicide occurs in situations where societal regulation is excessive, leading to a sense of hopelessness and oppression.
Key Points:
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