Culture of Honor and Violence Against the Self
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Date
2011-12-01Author
Lindsey L. Osterman
Ryan P. Brown
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Abstract
Cultures of honor facilitate certain forms of interpersonal violence. The authors suggest that these cultures might also promote values and expectations that could heighten suicide risk, such as strict gender-role standards and hypersensitivity to reputational threats, which could lead people living in such cultures to consider death as an option when failure occurs or reputation is threatened sufficiently. Study 1 shows that, controlling for a host of statewide covariates, honor states in the United States have significantly higher male and female suicide rates than do nonhonor states, particularly in nonmetropolitan areas among Whites. Study 2 shows that statewide levels of antidepressant prescriptions (an indicator of mental health resource utilization) are lower in honor states, whereas levels of major depression are higher, and statewide levels of depression are associated with suicide rates only among honor states. Finally, Study 3 shows that individual endorsement of honor ideology is positively associated with depression.
Citation
Osterman, L. L., & Brown, R. P. (2011). Culture of Honor and Violence Against the Self. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 37(12), 1611-1623. doi: 10.1177/0146167211418529