Crime and the Construction of Forensic Objectivity From 1850

(ed.)
Springer Verlag (2019)
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Abstract

This book charts the historical development of 'forensic objectivity' through an analysis of the ways in which objective knowledge of crimes, crime scenes, crime materials and criminals is achieved. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, with authors drawn from law, history, sociology and science and technology studies, this work shows how forensic objectivity is constructed through detailed crime history case studies, mainly in relation to murder, set in Scotland, England, Germany, Sweden, USA and Ireland. Starting from the mid-nineteenth century and continuing to the present day, the book argues that a number of developments were crucial. These include: the beginning of crime photography, the use of diagrams and models specially constructed for the courtroom so jurors could be ‘virtual witnesses’, probabilistic models of certainty, the professionalization of medical and scientific expert witnesses and their networks, ways of measuring, recording and developing criminal records and the role of the media, particularly newspapers in reporting on crime, criminals and legal proceedings and their part in the shaping of public opinion on crime. This essential title demonstrates the ways in which forensic objectivity has become a central concept in relation to criminal justice over a period spanning 170 years.

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Chapters

Murder Cases, Trunks and the Entanglement of Ethics: The Preservation and Display of Scenes of Crime Material

This chapter explores the materiality of recording serious crime and the police record, examining the agency and entanglement of objects as they move through time and space. It focuses on murder files because they often survive as ‘accidental tourists’ in record offices and may be accompanied by bag... see more

‘Children’s Lies’: The Weimar Press as Psychological Expert in Child Sex Abuse Trials

In Weimar Germany, the issue of witness credibility was fraught in trials involving accusations of child sexual abuse. Experimental research into children’s reliability by psychologists and pedagogues stressed the dangerousness of juvenile witnesses. By the mid-1920s, the most well-known result of r... see more

Detecting the Murderess: Newspaper Representations of Women Convicted of Murder in New York City, London, and Ireland, 1880–1914

Women who kill violate societal norms and provoke public disquiet. The murderess has therefore tended to attract intense and sensationalist press coverage. This chapter explores the pseudo-forensic analysis of the figure of the ‘murderess’, engaging with newspaper coverage of her appearance, demeano... see more

Reporting Violent Death: Networks of Expertise and the Scottish Post-mortem

This chapter uses a 1933 Dumfries murder case to examine an aspect of the practice of the medico-legal post-mortem examination in Scotland. While the initial autopsy was conducted by two local doctors, an Edinburgh-based expert was also asked to give an opinion about the death after the fact. This s... see more

The Construction of Forensic Knowledge in Victorian Yorkshire: Dr Thomas Scattergood and His Casebooks, 1856–1897

This chapter uses notebooks and media reportage of the extensive medico-legal practice of Leeds-based doctor, toxicologist, and lecturer Thomas Scattergood to examine the development of forensic techniques and the construction and circulation of forensic knowledge in the second half of the nineteent... see more

‘13 Yards Off the Big Gate and 37 Yards Up the West Walls’. Crime Scene Investigation in Mid-nineteenth Century Newcastle upon Tyne

On 27 February 1863, George Vass was convicted of the murder of Margaret Docherty in Newcastle upon Tyne on New Year’s Eve. The crime, trial, and execution were widely reported. The care and skill demonstrated in the police handling of the crime scene runs counter to the popular perception of consta... see more

The Police Surgeon, Medico-Legal Networks and Criminal Investigation in Victorian Scotland

As a medical practitioner affiliated to the city police and responsive to the demands of legal officials, the police surgeon daily worked at the intersection between differing professional collectives and communities in the nineteenth century. Conducting physical examinations of assaulted parties, u... see more

Making Forensic Evaluations: Forensic Objectivity in the Swedish Criminal Justice System

This chapter discusses contemporary forensic evaluation practices in contemporary Sweden, in the laboratory and at the crime scene. At both sites, forensic practitioners must manage—and communicate—uncertainty. In the forensic laboratory, forensic scientists use a Bayesian approach to evaluate labor... see more

The Biggar Murder: ‘A Triumph for Forensic Odontology’

This chapter focuses on the murder of a fifteen-year-old girl in a small Scottish town, Biggar, in 1967. The main evidence was a bite-mark on her body. Dental impressions from staff and youths at the nearby ‘approved school’ were made, and Gordon Hay, a youth with highly unusual dental features, bec... see more

Murder in Miniature: Reconstructing the Crime Scene in the English Courtroom

Exploring the little-known medium of the English crime scene miniature, this chapter removes the roof of the ‘bungalow of death’ and invites us to peer inside. Tiny scale models of murder scenes, like that of the Crumbles bungalow where Patrick Mahon killed Emily Kaye in 1924, appeared in nineteenth... see more

Bodies in the Bed: English Crime Scene Photographs as Documentary Images

This chapter argues that crime scene photographs from London in the 1930s combined new ideals of forensic objectivity with the emotions evoked by signs of violence and disrupted domestic interiors. Through the comparison of a set of crime scene photographs in the National Archives to a set of interi... see more

Crime and the Construction of Forensic Objectivity from 1850: Introduction

Introduces the edited collection, locating it in relation to relevant literature and introduces the historical and methodological approaches and themes represented in the work. The concept of forensic objectivity is introduced. Describes the logic of sub-sections, chapter ordering and inclusion of c... see more

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