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Aboriginal Suicide Is Different A Portrait Of Life And Self Destruction 2nd Edition Colin Tatz

  • SKU: BELL-1384564
Aboriginal Suicide Is Different A Portrait Of Life And Self Destruction 2nd Edition Colin Tatz
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Aboriginal Suicide Is Different A Portrait Of Life And Self Destruction 2nd Edition Colin Tatz instant download after payment.

Publisher: Aboriginal Studies Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.23 MB
Pages: 221
Author: Colin Tatz
ISBN: 9780855754983, 0855754982
Language: English
Year: 2005
Edition: 2

Product desciption

Aboriginal Suicide Is Different A Portrait Of Life And Self Destruction 2nd Edition Colin Tatz by Colin Tatz 9780855754983, 0855754982 instant download after payment.

Every Australian's birthright includes the expectation of a healthy and possibly happy life of some longevity, assisted by all the services which a civilised society can make possible. But this is not yet within the Aboriginal (or Maori, Pacific Islander, Canadian Inuit and American Indian) grasp. That so many young Aboriginal people prefer death to life implies a rejection of what people in the broader Australian society, have on offer. It reflects a failure, as a nation, to provide sufficient incentives for young Aborigines to remain alive. This is a study of youth who have, or feel they have, no purpose in life - or who may be seeking freedom in death.It is a portrait of life, and of self-destruction, by young Aboriginal men and women. To comprehend this relatively recent phenomenon, which occurs more outside than inside custody, one has to appreciate Aboriginal history - the effects of which contribute more to an understanding of suicide today than do psychological or medical theories about the victim. Aboriginal youth at risk are suffering more from social than from mental disorder. Adopting a historical and anthropological approach to suicide in New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory and New Zealand, this book documents rates of suicide that may well be the world's worst. It tries to glimpse the soul of the suicide rather than merely his or her contribution to our national statistics.

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