Suicide |
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Social aspects |
Legislation · Philosophy · Religious views · Euthanasia · Right to die · Benevolent suicide |
Suicide crisis |
Assessment of risk · Crisis hotline · Intervention · Prevention · Suicide watch |
Suicide types |
Assisted · Copycat · Cult · Familicide · Forced · Honor · Internet · Mass · Murder–suicide · Parasuicide · Suicide attack · By cop · Pact |
Epidemiology |
Gender · Suicide rate |
History |
Suicide in antiquity · List of suicides · Suicide methods (Hanging, London Underground) |
Related phenomena |
Ideation · Self-harm · Suicide note · Locations · Failed suicide attempt |
By country |
Canada · China · France · India · Japan · Pakistan · South Korea · United States |
Rates |
List of countries by suicide rate List of OECD countries by suicide rate |
A suicide pact is an agreed plan between two or more individuals to commit suicide. The plan may be to die together, or separately and closely timed. Suicide pacts are important concepts in the study of suicide, and have occurred throughout history, as well as in fiction.
Suicide pacts are generally distinct from mass suicide. The latter refers to incidents in which a larger number of people kill themselves together for the same ideological reason, often within a religious, political, military or paramilitary context. Suicide pacts, on the other hand, usually involve small groups of people (such as married or romantic partners, family members, or friends) whose motivations are typically non-ideological.
A suicide pact negotiated over the internet, often between complete strangers, is an Internet suicide.