Dwyer Isis, Justinvil Delande, Cunningham Andreana
Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Department of Anthropology, American University, Washington D.C., USA.
Forensic Sci Int Synerg. 2023 Apr 23;6:100327. doi: 10.1016/j.fsisyn.2023.100327. eCollection 2023.
Biocultural approaches are instrumental to the evolution of forensic anthropology, and this practice must first reckon with its own violences before it can ethically address structural violence at large. We take up the issue of coerced migrations of Caribbean populations and forensic practice at the southern border of the United States, to problematize how forensic identification standards contribute to the casualties of ethnic erasures and potentially exacerbate structural vulnerability of Black Caribbean populations. We put forward that forensic anthropology is complicit in maintaining inequality in death and identification for Black Caribbean migrants through the absence of necessary reference data and methods of population-affinity estimation, and the adoption of fundamentally flawed linguistic constructions of Blackness. Pushing forensic anthropology to continue engaging with the colonial logics that have shaped its understanding and motivation for quantifying human biologies is key in efforts toward a progressive disciplinary future.
生物文化方法对法医人类学的发展至关重要,这种实践必须首先正视自身的暴力行为,才能从伦理上全面应对结构性暴力。我们探讨了加勒比地区人口被迫迁移以及美国南部边境法医实践的问题,以质疑法医鉴定标准如何导致族裔被抹去的伤亡,并可能加剧加勒比黑人人口的结构性脆弱性。我们提出,由于缺乏必要的参考数据和人口亲缘关系估计方法,以及采用了存在根本缺陷的黑人语言建构,法医人类学在维持加勒比黑人移民死亡和身份识别方面的不平等中难辞其咎。推动法医人类学继续与塑造其对人类生物学量化理解和动机的殖民逻辑进行互动,是迈向进步学科未来努力的关键。