Is There a Sociology of Suicide?

dc.contributor.affiliationUniversidade de Santiago de Compostela. Departamento de Ciencia Política e Socioloxía
dc.contributor.affiliationUniversidade de Santiago de Compostela. Instituto de Estudos e Desenvolvemento de Galicia (IDEGA)
dc.contributor.authorFernández Vilas, Enrique
dc.contributor.authorLabora González, Juan José
dc.contributor.authorCoca, Juan R.
dc.date.accessioned2026-05-13T07:52:50Z
dc.date.available2026-05-13T07:52:50Z
dc.date.issued2026-05-10
dc.description.abstractA sociology of suicide plainly exists in a historical sense. Since Durkheim, sociologists have ssshown that suicide varies with integration, regulation, inequality, relational embeddedness, institutional arrangements, and cultural repertoires of meaning. The stronger question concerns the conditions under which this work coheres as a field. This essay argues that a specifically sociological explanation of suicide locates suicidal trajectories within patterned inequalities and institutional settings, identifies the meso-level arrangements through which these conditions are enacted, and situates action within available vocabularies, scripts, and moral classifications. Reconsidering structural, interpretive, cultural, relational, critical, intersectional, and digital contributions through this lens shows that the field's strongest insights arise when structure, relation, and meaning are treated as mutually constitutive. The essay contends that sociology's contribution weakens when social variables become residual risk markers inside clinical and epidemiological models. A coherent sociology of suicide requires a mechanism-based account of how social worlds distribute vulnerability, organize recognition, shape interpretation, and channel access to support.
dc.description.peerreviewedSI
dc.description.sponsorshipThis research was funded by University of Valladolid-The Bank of Santander (Spain), Grant number: 2024-3608; and “Research Development Grants 2025–2026, Cátedra Cel-Caja Rural”.
dc.identifier.citationFernández-Vilas, Labora González, J. J. y Coca, J. R. (2026). Is There a Sociology of Suicide?. Sociological Forum, 0, 1-4. https://doi.org/10.1111/socf.70078
dc.identifier.doi10.1111/socf.70078
dc.identifier.essn1573-7861
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10347/47228
dc.journal.titleSociological Forum
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherWiley
dc.relation.publisherversionhttps://doi.org/10.1111/socf.70078
dc.rights© 2026 The Author(s). Sociological Forum published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Eastern Sociological Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
dc.rightsAttribution 4.0 Internationalen
dc.rights.accessRightsopen access
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subjectDurkheim
dc.subjectSocial Theory
dc.subjectSociology of Suicide
dc.subjectSuicide
dc.titleIs There a Sociology of Suicide?
dc.typejournal article
dc.type.hasVersionVoR
dspace.entity.typePublication
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relation.isAuthorOfPublicatione7cbd851-cd00-4f9f-a75e-ba2472025ccf
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscoverye7cbd851-cd00-4f9f-a75e-ba2472025ccf

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