Event Description
Since 2003, South Korea has consistently recorded the highest suicide rates among member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). This trend has unfolded alongside a persistently low birth rate and overall population decline, changes that parallel the country’s neoliberal turn in the late 1990s. In response, the Korean government launched a state-led suicide prevention initiative in 2005, influenced by frameworks promoted by the World Health Organization (WHO). Despite more than two decades of continuation and expansion, the initiative has produced a limited measurable impact, as reflected in the persistently high numbers and rates of suicide currently.
In this presentation, Kwon examines South Korea’s state-led suicide prevention project by tracing how suicide and care are conceptualized and implemented within administrative systems and institutional practices. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted between 2021 and 2022 while volunteering at multiple public suicide prevention centers and non-governmental organizations in South Korea, she explores how prevention efforts translate complex distress into standardized categories, protocols, and measurable outcomes. While these processes enable programmatic coherence, monitoring, and assessment, they also narrow how suicide and care are understood and addressed, limiting the scope of empathetic engagement and practical support available to individuals in crisis.