Suicide as Emotional Disaster: A Governance-Centered Framework
Description
This preprint proposes a governance-centered framing of suicide as an “emotional disaster”: a systemic breakdown of emotional safety arising from failures in public institutions, social trust, and protective infrastructure.
Rather than treating suicide solely as an individual pathology, the paper reframes it as a collective risk indicator that calls for governance-level prevention—through emotional safety frameworks, crisis-sensing capability, and public-interest data governance.
The discussion is conceptual (not an empirical study) and is shared as a timestamped research record to support future analytical, policy, and technical development. Any reference to non-clinical emotional signals is intended to be ethically aggregated under privacy-preserving, rights-respecting governance and is not medical advice or a diagnostic tool.
This framework does not attribute responsibility to specific governments or institutions, but aims to expand the analytical vocabulary available to public administration, social policy, and welfare systems seeking population-level risk detection and early intervention beyond clinical models.
Files
Suicide as Emotional Disaster.pdf
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(39.5 kB)
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Additional details
Dates
- Issued
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2026-01-14"First public timestamp of the governance-centered 'emotional disaster' framing of suicide."