Archives, promises, values: forensic infrastructures in times of austerity
This article analyses the role of infrastructures in the ‘bioinformational turn’ in forensic science and examines processes through which evidence is constituted, validated, or challenged in and through domains of expertise that engage different techniques, data, objects and knowledges through infrastructural arrangements. While the digitisation of the infrastructures that underpin forensic service delivery promised connectivity, prosperity and wellbeing, in reality it also brought forward new levels of risk and vulnerability, generating new tensions and frictions in the body politic. As genetic science reaches post-archival horizons through new genetic sequencing technologies, forensic science in post-archival times raises questions concerning the differential impact of the fragmentation of analytical and archival infrastructures and increasingly asynchronous bureaucracies whose role is displaced by the relative autonomy of datasets and computational architectures that elude governance oversight and citizens’ scrutiny.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Additional Information |
forthcoming March 2021, issue 41.1 This article is subject to copyright. Copyright holder requires following statement to be completed once available: |
| Keywords | Archives, austerity, bioinformation, data, England and Wales, forensic science, infrastructures |
| Departments, Centres and Research Units | Anthropology |
| Date Deposited | 09 Mar 2020 10:24 |
| Last Modified | 17 Jun 2021 22:56 |
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