Practicing Forensic Anthropology
Kimmerle, Erin H.. Ed(S): Himmelgreen, David; Kedia, Satish
The problem of missing, endangered, and unidentified persons is increasingly approached through a human rights model with successful outcomes. Contexts vary from international investigations into war crimes, genocide, and extrajudicial killings to American “cold cases.” In all these examples, anthropologists play critical roles such as searching for clandestine graves, crime scene recovery, human identification, interviewing witnesses, repatriation, public education, and testifying in court. To successfully identify unknown persons, key questions about human variation and biology are essential. For example, can ancestry be reliably estimated? What are the ramifications of estimating the biological profile of an unknown person without appropriate references ... Read more
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About Kimmerle, Erin H.. Ed(S): Himmelgreen, David; Kedia, Satish
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