The missing, the martyred and the disappeared: Global networks, technical intensification and the end of human rights genetics

In 1984, a group of Argentine students, trained by US academics, formed the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team to apply the latest scientific techniques to the excavation of mass graves and identification of the dead, and to work toward transitional justice. This inaugurated a new era in global fo...

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description In 1984, a group of Argentine students, trained by US academics, formed the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team to apply the latest scientific techniques to the excavation of mass graves and identification of the dead, and to work toward transitional justice. This inaugurated a new era in global forensic science, as groups of scientists in the Global South worked outside of and often against local governments to document war crimes in post-conflict settings. After 2001, however, with the inauguration of the war on terror following the September 11th attacks on the World Trade Center in New York, global forensic science was again remade through US and European investment to increase preparedness in the face of potential terrorist attacks. In this paper, I trace this shift from human rights to humanitarian forensics through a focus on three moments in the history of post-conflict identification science. Through a close attention to the material semiotic networks of forensic science in post-conflict settings, I examine the shifting ground between non-governmental human rights forensics and an emerging security- and disaster-focused identification grounded in global law enforcement. I argue that these transformations are aligned with a scientific shift towards mechanized, routinized, and corporate-owned DNA identification and a legal privileging of the right to truth circumscribed by narrow articulations of kinship and the body.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; SAGE Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Academic staff
Anthropology
Argentina
Conflict
Corporate law
Counterterrorism
Deoxyribonucleic acid
Disaster management
DNA
Enforcement
Excavation
Forensic anthropology
Forensic Anthropology - history
Forensic computing
Forensic Genetics - history
Forensic Genetics - legislation & jurisprudence
Forensic science
Forensic sciences
Genetics
Graves
Guatemala
History of medicine and histology
History, 20th Century
History, 21st Century
Human rights
Human Rights - history
Humanitarianism
Humans
Identification
Interlocking directorates
International Cooperation - history
International trade
Justice
Kinship
Law enforcement
Local government
Offenses
Science
Security
Semiotics
September 11 terrorist attacks-2001
Southern Hemisphere
Teams
Terrorism
Transitional justice
Truth
War
War crimes
War Crimes - history
title The missing, the martyred and the disappeared: Global networks, technical intensification and the end of human rights genetics
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