- Columbia University Press
Genetic Justice: DNA Data Banks, Criminal Investigations, and Civil Liberties
Key Metrics
- Sheldon Krimsky
- Columbia University Press
- Paperback
- 9780231145213
- 8.9 X 6 X 0.9 inches
- 1.15 pounds
- Social Science > Criminology
- English
Book Description
Two leading authors on medical ethics, science policy, and civil liberties take a hard look at how the United States has balanced the use of DNA technology, particularly the use of DNA databanks in criminal justice, with the privacy rights of its citizenry. Krimsky and Simoncelli analyze the constitutional, ethical, and sociopolitical implications of expanded DNA collection in the United States and compare these findings to trends in the United Kingdom, Japan, Australia, Germany, and Italy. They explore many controversial topics, including the legal precedent for taking DNA from juveniles, the search for possible family members of suspects in DNA databases, the launch of DNA dragnets among local populations, and the warrantless acquisition by police of so-called abandoned DNA in the search for suspects. Most intriguing, Krimsky and Simoncelli explode the myth that DNA profiling is infallible, which has profound implications for criminal justice.
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