After over 100 years of constant dissatisfaction with the accuracy of suicide data, this paper suggests that the problem may actually lie with the category of suicide itself. In almost all previous research, ‘suicide’ is taken to be a self-evidently valid category of death, not an object of study in its own right. Instead, the focus in this paper is upon the presupposition that how a social fact like suicide is counted depends upon norms for its governmental regulation, leading to a reciprocal relationship between social norms and statistical norms. Since this relationship is centred almost entirely in the coroner’s office, this paper examines governmental, definitional and categorisational issues relating to how coroners reach findings of ...
There has been considerable recent debate about the impact that changes in the use of the “undetermi...
Suicides tend to be under-reported (by 10 to 38% in Canada) since many suicides are ‘hidden’ and con...
Suicide is the leading ‘external’ (non-natural) cause of death in Australia. Australian coronial co...
After over 100 years of constant dissatisfaction with the accuracy of suicide data, this paper sugge...
After over 100 years of constant dissatisfaction with the accuracy of suicide data, this paper sugg...
This paper addresses some of the results from a large-scale-funded research project into the coronia...
Australia has a significantly higher suicide rate than England. Rather than accepting that this ‘st...
This study of English Coronial practice raises a number of questions, not only regarding state inves...
The purpose of this article is to extend previous discussion of the relationship between coronial ve...
SUMMARY Suicide is underreported for a number of reasons and the reliability of the official rates i...
This study of English Coronial practice raises a number of questions about the role played by the Co...
This study of English Coronial practice raises a number of questions about the role played by the Co...
Objectives. In this analysis, we ask whether there is systematic variation in the reporting of suici...
A study of suicide certifications explored their accuracy in the light of the difficulties inherent ...
Doubt about the reliability of official suicide statistics has been noted for over 200 years. Confou...
There has been considerable recent debate about the impact that changes in the use of the “undetermi...
Suicides tend to be under-reported (by 10 to 38% in Canada) since many suicides are ‘hidden’ and con...
Suicide is the leading ‘external’ (non-natural) cause of death in Australia. Australian coronial co...
After over 100 years of constant dissatisfaction with the accuracy of suicide data, this paper sugge...
After over 100 years of constant dissatisfaction with the accuracy of suicide data, this paper sugg...
This paper addresses some of the results from a large-scale-funded research project into the coronia...
Australia has a significantly higher suicide rate than England. Rather than accepting that this ‘st...
This study of English Coronial practice raises a number of questions, not only regarding state inves...
The purpose of this article is to extend previous discussion of the relationship between coronial ve...
SUMMARY Suicide is underreported for a number of reasons and the reliability of the official rates i...
This study of English Coronial practice raises a number of questions about the role played by the Co...
This study of English Coronial practice raises a number of questions about the role played by the Co...
Objectives. In this analysis, we ask whether there is systematic variation in the reporting of suici...
A study of suicide certifications explored their accuracy in the light of the difficulties inherent ...
Doubt about the reliability of official suicide statistics has been noted for over 200 years. Confou...
There has been considerable recent debate about the impact that changes in the use of the “undetermi...
Suicides tend to be under-reported (by 10 to 38% in Canada) since many suicides are ‘hidden’ and con...
Suicide is the leading ‘external’ (non-natural) cause of death in Australia. Australian coronial co...