For Vol. 1, see HCP 222-I (ISBN 9780215544605)
RAND researchers explored the U.S. and English forensic DNA analysis systems to find out whether England has capitalized more fully on their crime-fighting potential than the U.S. system, processing samples more quickly and providing more ...
This volume offers important guidance to anyone working with this emerging law enforcement tool: policymakers, specialists in criminal law, forensic scientists, geneticists, researchers, faculty, and students.
This book provides an account of the development of forensic identification technologies and the way in which this has impacted upon the legal system.
Statutory provisions also authorize the collection of DNA samples from federal offenders and arrestees, District of Columbia offenders, and military offenders.
The DNA is placed in small wells on one end of a flat gelatin surface and then exposed to an electric field. The separation of the DNA segments by size is based on the fact that each DNA strand is negatively charged.
This book is timely and significant in providing the essential background and discussion of the ethical, legal and societal dimensions for academics, practitioners, public interest and criminal justice organisations, and students of the ...
The book also explores the questions raised by the growing debate on the applications of national DNA databases and the resulting challenges of developing, maintaining and curating such vast data structures.
McLaughlin, C., Osborne, P. and Ferlie, E. (2001) The New Public Management: Current Trends and Future Prospects. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Miller, P. and Rose, N. (1988) 'The Tavistock Programme: the government of subjectivity ...
U.S. Department of Justice, DNA Initiative: Possible Results from DNA Tests, http://www.dna.gov/basics/analysis/ ... Congressional Research Service 1 DNA Testing in Criminal Justice: Background, Current Law, Grants, and Issues I.
Governance Rules for the National DNA Database Strategy Board