Anthropology of violent death : theoretical foundations for forensic humanitarian action / edited by Roberto C. Parra, Douglas H. Ubelaker.
Contributor(s): Parra, Roberto C [editor.] | Ubelaker, Douglas H [editor.]
Language: English Series: Forensic science in focus: Publisher: Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2023Copyright date: ©2023Description: 1 online resource (xxix, 395 pages) : illustrations (chiefly color), mapContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781119806363; 9781119806387; 1119806380; 9781119806370; 1119806372; 9781119806394; 1119806399Subject(s): Forensic anthropology | Violent deaths | Forensic Anthropology | Violence | Homicide | Body Remains | Sociological FactorsGenre/Form: Electronic books.DDC classification: 614/.17 LOC classification: RA1059 | .A58 2023GN69.8 | .A68 2023Online resources: Full text available at Wiley Online Library Click here to viewItem type | Current location | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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EBOOK | COLLEGE LIBRARY | COLLEGE LIBRARY | 614.17 An869 2023 (Browse shelf) | Available |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Table of Contents
About the editors, xiii
About the contributors, xv
Foreword, xix
Preface, xxiii
Series preface, xxvii
Acknowledgments, xxix
1 The anthropology of violent death and the treatment of the bodies: an introduction, 1
Roberto C. Parra and Douglas H. Ubelaker
2 The posthumous dignity of dead persons, 1
Antoon De Baets
2.1 Introduction: generations and posthumous dignity, 15
2.2 The dead and posthumous dignity, 17
2.3 Evidence for posthumous dignity, 18
2.4 Duties flowing from posthumous dignity, 19
2.5 The nature of posthumous dignity, 23
2.6 Semantic debates about posthumous dignity, 25
2.7 Breaches of posthumous dignity, 26
2.8 Restoration of posthumous dignity, 28
2.9 Conclusion: the impact of posthumous dignity, 31
3 Continuing bonds and social memory: absence--presence, 39
Avril Maddrell
3.1 What are continuing bonds and how are they experienced and expressed?, 39
3.2 Continuing bonds and the well-being of mourners, 43
3.3 Implications for professional service providers, 46
4 The archaeology of disappearance, 49
Alfredo González-Ruibal
4.1 Introduction, 49
4.2 Disappearance and power: concealment, dispersal, and virtualization, 51
4.3 Material disappearance, human disappearance, 55
4.4 The disappearance of disappearance, 58
4.5 Concluding Remarks, 62
5 Bioarchaeology of violent death, 67
Anna Osterholtz, Debra Martin and Ryan Harrod
5.1 Introduction and background, 67
5.2 Categories of group-level violent death, 70
5.2.1 Bioarchaeology of Massacres, 70
5.3 Case studies illustrating integrative approaches to massacres in the past, 70
5.4 Differentiating between kratophanous violence and ritualized death, 77
5.5 Conclusions, 81
6 Destruction, mass violence, and human remains: Dealing with dead bodies as a "total social phenomenon", 91
Élisabeth Anstett
6.1 Introduction, 91
6.2 Understanding the forms taken by the Forensic Turn, and its effects, 93
6.3 Understanding the genealogy of professional practices of disinterment, 98
6.4 The blind spots of a total social phenomenon of great complexity, 102
6.5 Conclusion, 103
7 Kill, kill again and destroy: when death is not enough, 109
Roberto C. Parra, Digna M. Vigo-Corea and Pierre Perich
7.1 Introduction, 109
7.2 Dehumanizing, 111
7.3 When death is not enough, 114
7.4 Dismembering/mutilating: the perspective from culture, 121
7.5 Conclusions, 126
8 Mourning violent deaths and disappearances, 133
Antonius C. G. M. Robben
8.1 Introduction, 133
8.2 The conflictive mourning of the dead and missing after the First World War, 134
8.3 Enduring bonds of the living, the dead, and the disappeared in Argentina, 138
8.4 Oscillatory mourning of the dead and the disappeared by the bereaved, 142
8.5 Conclusion, 147
9 Whose humanitarianism, whose forensic anthropology?, 153
Jaymelee J. Kim and Adam Rosenblatt
9.1 Introduction, 153
9.2 Positionality of the authors, 155
9.3 Reconceptualizing violent deaths, 156
9.4 The dead as articipants in forensic anthropology, 158
9.5 What's missing from human rights, 166
9.6 The continued expansion of forensic anthropology, 169
10 Battlefields and killed in action: tombs of the unknown soldier and commemoration, 177
Laura Wittman
10.1 Introduction, 177
10.2 Tomb of the unknown soldier, 178
10.3 Mutilated victory, 182
10.4 As an Epilogue, 190
11 Mass grave protection and missing persons, 197
Melanie Klinkner
11.1 Introduction, 197
11.2 Missing persons in mass graves: a worldwide phenomenon, 198
11.3 The legal framework for mass grave protection, 201
11.4 Practicalities of protection, 208
11.5 Protection on a global scale, 210
11.6 Conclusion: the need to do better, 213
12 Respect for the dead under international law and Islamic law in armed conflicts, 219
Ahmed Al-Dawoody and Alexandra Ortiz Signoret
12.1 Introduction, 219
12.2 The Legal Framework, 220
12.3 Search for, Collect, and Evacuate the Dead without Adverse Distinction, 221
12.4 Identification and Recording of Information on the Dead, 224
12.5 Respecting the Dead and Dignified Treatment, 226
12.6 Respectful Disposal of the Dead, 229
12.7 Gravesites and Other Locations of Mortal Remains, 233
12.8 Exhumations, 234
12.9 Return of Human Remains and Personal Effects of the Dead, 236
12.10 Conclusion, 239
13 Unmaking forgotten mass graves and honorable burial: engaging with the spanish civil war legacy, 251
Francisco Ferrándiz
13.1 Overture, 251
13.2 On Funerary Militarism, 252
13.3 Franco's Militarist Imprint Under Siege, 256
13.4 Unmaking the Generalissimo's Burial, 262
13.5 Military disassemblage, 269
14 Dealing with bad death in post-conflict societies: forensic devices, burials of exhumed remains, and mourning processes in Peru, 277
Valérie Robin-Azevedo
14.1 Models for dealing with death: morphologies of "good death" and "bad death", 277
14.2 Contexts of mass violence through the lens of bad death, 278
14.3 Transitional justice, the forensic turn, and the "dignified burial": can we reverse bad death?, 280
14.4 From the necropolitics to the necrogovernamentality of the Peruvian state, 281
14.5 Exhumation of mass graves and the reactivation of bad death in the Andes, 284
14.6 The task of identification or the process of rehumanization of ill-treated bodies, 287
14.7 The uncertain dates and stretched time of bad death, 291
14.8 Body substitutes in the absence of any trace of remains, 293
14.9 Conclusion, 295
15 Migrant death and the ethics of visual documentation in forensic anthropology, 303
Krista E. Latham, Alyson J. O'Daniel and Tanya Ramos
15.1 Introduction, 303
15.2 Disciplinary ethics and social change: contextualizingforensic anthropology practices, 304
15.3 Methods and scope, 309
15.4 Making the case for a more socially aware practice of forensic anthropology, 318
15.5 Closing, 320
16 Bedeviling binaries: an integrated and dialectical approach to forensicanthropology in northern Uganda, 327
Tricia Redeker Hepner and Dawnie W. Steadman
16.1 Introduction, 327
16.2 Restless spirits and human remains in Acholiland, Uganda, 329
16.3 The integrated approach, 336
16.4 To excavate or not to excavate?, 340
16.5 Conclusion: from binary to dialectical relationships, 344
17 Guiding principles for the dignified management of the dead in humanitarian emergencies and to prevent them from becoming missing persons, 351
Stephen Cordner and Morris Tidball-Binz
17.1 Why the need for these principles?, 351
17.2 To whom are the guiding principles addressed?, 354
17.3 Setting the scene, 355
17.4 The preamble to the Guiding Principles, 360
17.5 The Guiding Principles, 362
17.6 The process of producing the Guiding Principles, 369
17.7 Conclusions, 369
18 Epilog: Anthropology of violent death and forensic humanitarian action, 375
Douglas H. Ubelaker and Roberto C. Parra
18.1 Humanity and its less violent reactions?, 375
18.2 Anthropology applied to forensic sciences and the notion of anthropology of violent death in the humanitarian context, 377
Note 382
References 383
Index, 385
"Forensic sciences requires approaching the social sciences to understand situations of treatment of corpses and body parts such as the disposal, concealment and destruction of bodies that are integrated into the symbolic and social space of societies, but also the social life of the dead, their bodies, violence against bodies and their absences. To address these topics, forensic science also requires consolidating concepts and theoretical foundations that contribute to the development of humanitarian action in the face of tragedy and violent death. The approaches are directed towards the respect of those who died and their memory and social and cultural needs of the populations affected"-- Provided by publisher.
About the Author
Edited by
Roberto C. Parra is a Peruvian forensic anthropologist and staff member of the technical assistance team of the United Nations Joint Human Rights Office (UNJHRO) of the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO). He has worked as an expert witness and as a strategic manager for the application of forensic sciences in various cases, and has over 20 years of professional experience, including victims of plane crashes and shipwrecks, human rights violations during armed conflicts and post-conflict, as well as in everyday cases of common crime. Since 2012, he has developed international missions in Latin America, Africa, and the Middle East for the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner (OHCHR) of the United Nations.
Douglas H. Ubelaker is a Curator and Senior Scientist at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC. He has been a Member of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences (AAFS) since 1974, serving as its 2011-2012 President. He is a recipient of many honors, including the Anthropology Award of the Washington Academy of Sciences, the AAFS Lucas Medal, and the FBI Director’s Award for Exceptional Public Service.
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