10,607 research outputs found

    Drilling down into ethics: A thematic review of ethical considerations for the creation and use of 3D printed human remains in crime reconstruction

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    The existing literature contains some exploration of the ethics concerning human remains in forensic and virtual anthropology. However, previous work has stopped short of interrogating the underlying ethical concepts. The question of how people understand and apply these concepts in practice, and what it means to act ethically, remain underexplored. This thematic review explores the ethical considerations that contribute to the creation and use of 3D printed human remains for forensic purposes. The three main branches of ethical theory are outlined to explore how they may apply to forensic practice. Key themes relating to 3D printing human remains in forensic contexts were explored to better understand the ethics landscape, ethical challenges, and the current guidelines in place. Through this thematic review, nine ethics principles were identified as key principles for guiding best practice: anonymity, autonomy, beneficence, consent, context, justice, non-maleficence, proportionality, and transparency. It is suggested that these principles could be incorporated into adaptable guidelines going forward to support ethical practice. The findings also suggest that holistic ethics cognition training may have value in supporting forensic scientists in ethical decision-making, together with procedural and structural design that may promote best practice and reduce cognitive load

    Introducing the Department of Anthropology

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    Článek představuje Ústav antropologie Přírodovědecké fakulty Masarykovy univerzity.The article presents the Department of Anthropology of the Faculty of Science, Masaryk University

    Western Oregon University 2016-2017 Course Catalog

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    https://digitalcommons.wou.edu/coursecatalogs/1013/thumbnail.jp

    Western Oregon University 2019-2020 Course Catalog

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    https://digitalcommons.wou.edu/coursecatalogs/1022/thumbnail.jp

    Western Oregon University 2018-2019 Course Catalog

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    https://digitalcommons.wou.edu/coursecatalogs/1021/thumbnail.jp

    Identification of Ajnala skeletal remains using multiple forensic anthropological methods and techniques: a bioarchaeological report.

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    Fragmented and badly damaged commingled human remains present a tough challenge for their identification pursuits in forensic anthropology. Thousands of unknown human remains along with items of contextual identity, reportedly belonging to 282 Indian sepoys killed in 1857, were exhumed non-scientifically from a disused ancient well at Ajnala (Amritsar, India). In this manuscript, the non-scientific excavation of unknown human remains from the abandoned well, their forensic anthropological strategies for identification purposes, challenges being faced and future possibilities of their biological profiling have been discussed. Multiple methods and techniques like anthropological examinations, odontological profiling, radiological analyses, stable isotope and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) analyses were applied to few bones and teeth collected from the Ajnala skeletal assemblage. Though majority of studied bones and teeth were found belonging to adult males, very few of them had morphological, osteological and molecular features questioning the authenticity and validity of the written records. Due to certain ambiguous findings or gaps observed between the anthropological analyses of the Ajnala skeletal remains and the reported versions about their affiliations; certain advanced radiological, chemical and molecular techniques were applied to estimate their probable age, sex and populational affinity. The obtained radiological, isotopic and molecular signatures of the remains were compared with the available databases to estimate their affinity with the individuals of geographic area to whom the remains reportedly belonged to. The maternally inherited mtDNA haplogroup assignments, and stable isotope analysis of carbon and oxygen suggested that the studied human remains belonged to the individuals from West Bengal, Bihar, Odisha, Awadh (presently in Uttar Pradesh) and parts of Meghalaya and Manipur as potential regions of their geographic identity and thus, attributing the victims to be non-local to the site. However, merely on the basis of forensic anthropological examinations of very few bones and teeth (collected out of a huge collection of thousands of bones and teeth); it would be just an unqualified and sweeping conclusion to claim their identity as adult or non-adult, male or female, local or non-local, victims of 1857 mass killings or to the victims of ceremonial sacrifices or criminal activities committed in the past. A sufficient number of bones and teeth along with items of personal identity needs to be examined with multiple scientific techniques to arrive at some valid conclusions about their biological identity
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