Contemporary forensic science has achieved unprecedented visibility as a compelling example of applied expertise. But the common public view—that we are living in an era of forensic deliverance, one exemplified by DNA typing—has masked the reality: that forensic science has always been unique, problematic, and contested. Global Forensic Cultures aims to rectify this problem by recognizing the universality of forensic questions and the variety of practices and institutions constructed to answer them. Groundbreaking essays written by leaders in the field address the complex and contentious histories of forensic techniques. Contributors also examine the co-evolution of these techniques with the professions creating and using them, with the systems of governance and jurisprudence in which they are used, and with the socioeconomic, political, racial, and gendered settings of that use. Exploring the profound effect of 'location' (temporal and spatial) on the production and enactment of forms of forensic knowledge during the century before CSI became a household acronym, the book explores numerous related topics, including the notion of burden of proof, changing roles of experts and witnesses, the development and dissemination of forensic techniques and skills, the financial and practical constraints facing investigators, and cultures of forensics and of criminality within and against which forensic practitioners operate. Covering sites of modern and historic forensic innovation in the United States, Europe, and farther-flung imperial and global settings, these essays tell stories of blood, poison, corpses; tracking persons and attesting documents; truth-making, egregious racism, and sinister surveillance. Each chapter is a finely grained case study. Collectively, Global Forensic Cultures supplies a historical foundation for the critical appraisal of contemporary forensic institutions which has begun in the wake of DNA-based exonerations.
Author(s): Ian Burney, Christopher Hamlin
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 357
Tags: Global Forensic Cultures, Forensic Sciences, History
Contents......Page 6
Acknowledgments......Page 8
Introduction: Forensic Facts, the Guts of Rights......Page 12
Part I. Evidence and Epistemology......Page 46
Chapter 1. The Value(s) of Methods: Method Selection in German Forensic Toxicology in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century......Page 48
Chapter 2. The Imperial Serologist and Punitive Self-Harm: Bloodstains and Legal Pluralism in British India......Page 71
Chapter 3. Handwriting Analysis as a Dynamic Artisanal Science: The Hardless Detective Dynasty and the Forensic Cultures of the British Raj......Page 97
Chapter 4. Spatters and Lies: Contrasting Forensic Cultures in the Trials of Sam Sheppard, 1954–66......Page 123
Part II. Practices of Power and Policing......Page 158
Chapter 5. Death and Empire: Medicolegal Investigations and Practice across the British Empire......Page 160
Chapter 6. Fingerprints and the Politics of Scientific Policing in Early Twentieth-Century Spain......Page 185
Chapter 7. From Bedouin Trackers to Doberman Pinschers: The Rise of Dog Tracking as Forensic Evidence in Palestine......Page 216
Chapter 8. “DNA Evidence Cannot Lie”: Forensic Science, Truth Regimes, and Civic Epistemology in Thai History......Page 246
Part III. Training and Transmitting......Page 266
Chapter 9. Cleaning Out the Mortuary and the Medicolegal Text: Ambriose Tardieu’s Modernizing Enterprise......Page 268
Chapter 10. The Strange Science: Tracking and Detection in the Late Nineteenth-Century Punjab......Page 290
Chapter 11. Forensic Knowledge and Forensic Networks in Britain’s Empire: The Case of Sydney Smith......Page 316
Afterword: A Tale of Two Cities? Locating the History of Forensic Science and Medicine in Contemporary Forensic Reform Discourse......Page 336
List of Contributors......Page 346
B......Page 350
C......Page 351
F......Page 352
I......Page 353
M......Page 354
P......Page 355
S......Page 356
W......Page 357