Pressing need for national governmental recognition of forensic anthropology in South Africa as illustrated in a medico-legal case

•Forensic anthropology is important for medico-legal death investigations.•Value and merit of interdisciplinary knowledge and a collaborative approach to forensic casework.•Need for national regulatory framework for the practice of forensic anthropology in South Africa. Forensic anthropology in Sout...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science & justice 2022-07, Vol.62 (4), p.411-417
Hauptverfasser: Gibbon, Victoria Elaine, Finaughty, Chandra, Moller, Izelle, Finaughty, Devin Alexander
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Forensic anthropology is important for medico-legal death investigations.•Value and merit of interdisciplinary knowledge and a collaborative approach to forensic casework.•Need for national regulatory framework for the practice of forensic anthropology in South Africa. Forensic anthropology in South Africa is well developed in the higher education sector, with advanced training and research programmes. Despitethis and decades of academic involvement in casework, forensic anthropology still lacks a defined framework and mandate ata governmentallevel. Therefore, the involvement of forensic anthropologists’ expertise varies markedly between cases, provinces, and among various stakeholderswithinthe country, to the detriment of dispensation of social and criminal justice. The lack ofclearly defined guidelines for the renderingof the service was exemplified and demonstrated through a recent forensic case. Here,contextual information was absent, and the remains posed a challenge to analyse, ostensibly due tomissing information. Numerous questions were raised during the analysis of the remains, and broader concerns about the investigative involvement of a forensic anthropologist within South African casework were brought to the fore. Through the analysis of this case, we describe the deductive processes that led to the formation of an opinion that the skeletal linear defects were the result of taphonomic changes. In addition, we highlighthow these efforts where constrained and each step in theprocess unnecessarily hindered. Finally, we demonstrate the capacity andwillingness offorensic anthropology practitioners to be involved, and how, withoutgovernmentalsupport, it is a great potential lamentably untapped.
ISSN:1355-0306
1876-4452
DOI:10.1016/j.scijus.2022.05.003