The Technology of Justice: DNA and the Criminal Justice System
Edited By:
David Lazer
John F. Kennedy School of Government
Harvard University
______________________________________________________________________________________________
1. STEPHEN BREYER
United States Supreme Court
2. DAVID LAZER
Harvard University
INTRODUCTION:
DNA AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM
3. FREDERICK R. BIEBER
Harvard University
Science and Technology of Forensic DNA Profiling:
Current Use and Future Directions
4. EDWARD IMWINKELRIED
University of California at Davis
THE RELATIVE
PRIORITY WHICH SHOULD BE ASSIGNED TO TRIAL STAGE DNA ISSUES
5. SIMON A. COLE
University of California at Irvine
FINGERPRINT
IDENTIFICATION AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM: HISTORICAL LESSONS FOR THE DNA
DEBATE
6. GEORGE ANNAS
Boston University
7. R. ALTA CHARO
University of Wisconsin-Madison
8. D.H. KAYE and MICHAEL SMITH
Arizona State University and University of Wisconsin
DNA DATABASES FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT:
THE COVERAGE QUESTION AND THE CASE FOR A POPULATION-WIDE DATABASE
9. BARRY STEINHARDT
ACLU
PRIVACY AND
FORENSIC DNA DATA BANKS
10. AMITAI ETZIONI
George Washington University
DNA TESTS AND DATABASES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE:
INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS
AND THE COMMON GOOD
DNA databases and
informational privacy and the OECD
Guidelines
12. MARGARET A. BERGER
Brooklyn Law School
13. GARLAND ALLEN
Washington University
DNA AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR GENETICS:
IMPLICATIONS FOR THE
CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM
14. TROY DUSTER
New York University and the U. of California,
Berkeley
THE INEXORABLE EXPANSION OF THE DNA FORENSIC DATABASE AND THE LOOMING SPECTER OF AN EARLY 21ST CENTURY PHENOLOGY Slide 1, Slide 2
15. SHEILA JASANOFF
Harvard University
_______________________________________________________________________________
50 States DNA Databank/Database Laws
________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
Last updated: 02/04/03