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Cultural continuity as a hedge against suicide in Canada's First Nations

Author: M. J. Chandler and C. Lalonde
Publication Year: 1998

The authors develop the concepts of personal and cultural continuity, and how personal and/or cultural change undermines continuity and may put an individual at risk of suicide. Using data from British Columbia, Canada (1987-1992) the authors first examine Indigenous communities with elevated suicide rates, followed by Indigenous communities with very low rates of the same. They contend that these rates are associated with greater or lesser cultural continuity, as indicated by community heritage practices.

Abstract: 

This research report examines self-continuity and its role as a protective factor against suicide. First, we review the notions of personal and cultural continuity and their relevance to understanding suicide among First Nations youth. The central theoretical idea developed here is that, because it is constitutive of what it means to have or be a self to somehow count oneself as continuous in time, anyone whose identity is undermined by radical personal and cultural change is put at special risk of suicide for the reason that they lose those future commitments that are necessary to guarantee appropriate care and concern for their own well-being. It is for just such reasons that adolescents and young adults - who are living through moments of especially dramatic change - constitute such a high-risk group. This generalized period of increased risk during adolescence can be made even more acute within communities that lack a concomitant sense of cultural continuity which might otherwise support the efforts of young persons to develop more adequate self-continuity-warranting practices. We present data to demonstrate that, while certain indigenous or First Nations groups do in fact suffer dramatically elevated suicide rates, such rates vary widely across British Columbia's nearly 200 aboriginal groups: some communities show rates 800 times the national average, while in others suicide is essentially unknown. Finally, we demonstrate that these variable incidence rates are strongly associated with the degree to which British Columbia's 196 bands are engaged in community practices that are employed as markers of a collective effort to rehabilitate and vouchsafe the cultural continuity of these groups. Communities that have taken active steps to preserve and rehabilitate their own cultures are shown to be those in which youth suicide rates are dramatically lower.

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Access this resource from Transcultural Psychiatry. 

Chandler, Michael J., and Christopher E. Lalonde. “Cultural Continuity as a Hedge Against Suicide in Canada’s First Nations.” Transcultural Psychiatry no. 35 (1998): 191–219.

Additional Info

  • Publication Type: Journal Article
  • In Publication: Transcultural Psychiatry
  • Keywords: Health and Wellness
Last modified on Tuesday, 22 May 2018 05:43