In this paper the political fortunes and identities of Irish Catholics in US and Canadian cities are explored through a comparative study of Buffalo and Toronto. Local spaces of political administration in the urban arena, such as wards, were significant in affecting the generation of sociopolitical networks of power which in turn had implications for the sense of political identity and involvement felt by Irish Catholics within these two places. The importance of such spaces, however, was also contingent on the interaction between these cities' Irish Catholic populations and wider geographies of social, economic, and ethnoreligious relations over time as well as on the topographies and traditions of political power that extended beyond the municipal scale in both societies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
SUICIDE, SUICIDE statistics, SUICIDAL behavior in youth, COUNTRIES, MAORI (New Zealand people), RESEARCH, RESEARCH methodology, MEDICAL cooperation, EVALUATION research, COMPARATIVE studies, DEMOGRAPHY
Abstract
Objective: To review rates of suicide and 'hidden suicide' in New Zealand (NZ), Australia, Ireland and Spain.Method: Using estimated population figures and online cause-of-death data from four countries, rates of suicide and 'hidden suicide' in 2014-2016 were calculated and compared.Results: Age patterns and rates of suicide and 'hidden suicide' differ between these countries. The male suicide rate progressively rises across the age range in Spain but becomes lower in late life in Ireland. The male patterns in NZ and Australia are bimodal; male and female rates decrease in late life, with NZ lower than Australia. Māori age patterns are downward-sloping. Suicide rates of young Māori considerably exceed those of young non-Māori in NZ.Conclusions: The NZ youth suicide peaks are attributable to high rates of Māori youth suicide. Rates of 'hidden suicide' are relatively low in the four countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]