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Forensic Geoscience

Geology Today, 2006
Readers of Geology Today may recently have seen the words ‘geoscience’, ‘geology’ and ‘forensic’ in association. Over the past two years a number of publications, meetings and news items have raised the profile of geology (and its cognate subjects) in criminal investigations.
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Forensic radiology.

The British Journal of Radiology, 1999
Imaging techniques are a powerful tool in forensic science. Medical examiners and forensic anthropologists are less versed in the finer points of radiology than radiologists; nevertheless they are required to interpret findings from imaging studies to further medico-legal investigations.
T, Kahana, J, Hiss
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Forensic dentistry

The Journal of the American Dental Association, 1976
Data and information derived from the teeth and oral structures have been used successfully where other methods of identification or determination of criminal responsibility have failed. In many instances, the techniques used in forensic dentistry bring evidence to a point of certitude that would otherwise be lacking.
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Forensic Science

Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, 2005
The United States Supreme Court has long recognized the value of scientific evidence – especially when compared to other types of evidence such as eyewitness identifications, confessions, and informant testimony. For example, inEscobedo v. Illinois, the Court observed: “We have learned the lesson of history, ancient and modern, that a system of ...
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Forensic Geosciences

2014
Forensic Geoscience are the set of all sciences that focuses on Earth system and can be applied in law enforcement and in intelligence activities. The word “Forensic Geoscience” replaces the obsolete “Forensic Geology” because this last gave a limited and misleading image of possible and potential applications of the Earth Science in Criminalistic and ...
SACCHI, Eva   +3 more
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Forensic Psychiatry

2018
Abstract: Forensic psychiatry is an exciting specialty of psychiatry. It takes care of chronic, highly complicated psychiatric patients with problems in various domains, e.g., diagnostic comorbidity, and circumstantial risks. In this chapter, we will provide a brief overview of the most important issues in forensic psychiatry. First, we define forensic
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Forensic Chemistry

Annual Review of Analytical Chemistry, 2009
Forensic chemistry is unique among chemical sciences in that its research, practice, and presentation must meet the needs of both the scientific and the legal communities. As such, forensic chemistry research is applied and derivative by nature and design, and it emphasizes metrology (the science of measurement) and validation.
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Forensic psychotherapy

Australasian Psychiatry, 2017
Objectives: This paper describes the role forensic psychotherapy has in the assessment and treatment of mentally disordered offender patients, and its role in the supervision of individual therapists, staff groups or whole organisations which contain and manage this patient population.
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Image Forensics

Annual Review of Vision Science, 2019
From mainstream media outlets to social media and everything in between, doctored photographs are appearing with growing frequency and sophistication. The resulting lack of trust is impacting law enforcement, national security, the media, e-commerce, and more.
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