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The Work of Genetic Technologies in Postcolonial Law and Policing

Professor Noah Tamarkin
January 19, 2017
All Day
38 Townshend Hall IPR Conference Room (basement)

Time: 12-1:30 p.m.
Event Host: Criminal Justice Research Center
Short Description: This presentation introduces an ongoing ethnographic project that examines the expansion of a national criminal DNA database in South Africa. It considers the material, political, and affective work that genetic technologies are made to do in relation to postcolonial law and policing.


This presentation introduces an ongoing ethnographic project that examines the expansion of a national criminal DNA database in South Africa. It considers the material, political, and affective work that genetic technologies are made to do in relation to postcolonial law and policing. The project as a whole investigates global criminal forensic genetics as an emerging citizenship formation with interconnected local, national, and transnational influences and implications. It uses ethnographic methodologies to consider how a cross-section of people from diverse social and political backgrounds who have different forms of expertise and different ideas about the meaning of science and justice are brought together through their roles in enacting South Africa’s emerging investment in forensic genetics. 

For more information visit Criminal Justice Research Center. 

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