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Book Reviews

Digging for the Disappeared: Forensic Science After Atrocity

by Adam Rosenblatt. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2015. 304 pp. $24.95.

References

  • ADAMS, Bradley J., and BYRD, John E. (2014) Commingled Human Remains: Methods in Recovery, Analysis, and Identification (Oxford: Elsevier).
  • DIRKMAAT, Dennis (ed.). (2012) A Companion to Forensic Anthropology (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing).
  • INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE OF THE RED CROSS (ICRC). (2007) Missing Persons — A Hidden Tragedy (Geneva: International Committee of the Red Cross).
  • JASANOFF, Sheila (ed.). (2004) States of Knowledge: The Co-Production of Science and the Social Order (London: Routledge).
  • LYNCH, Michael, and MCNALLY, Ruth. (2009) Forensic DNA databases: The co-production of law and surveillance technologies. In Handbook of Genetics and Society: Mapping the New Genomic Era, Paul Atkinson, Peter Glasner, and Margaret Lock (eds.) (London: Routledge).
  • MOL, Annemarie, MOSER, Ingunn, and POLS, Jeanette. (2010) Care in Practice: On Tinkering in Clinics, Homes and Farms (Bielefeld, Germany: Transcript Verlag).
  • STOVER, Eric, and SHIGEKANE, Rachel. (2002) The missing in the aftermath of war: When do the needs of victims' families and international war crimes tribunals clash? International Review of the Red Cross, 84(848), 845–866.
  • TOOM, Victor. (2016) Whose body is it? Technolegal materialization of victims' bodies and remains after the World Trade Center terrorist attacks. Science, Technology & Human Values, 41(4), 686–708.
  • WAGNER, Sarah E. (2008) To Know Where He Lies: DNA Technology and the Search for Srebrenica's Missing (Berkeley: University of California Press).

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