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The trial of the skull studied by the founder of Criminal Anthropology: The war of the Lombroso Museum

Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine, 2018
More than a century after the death of Cesare Lombroso, who still today is considered the founder of Criminal Anthropology, the debate on the atavisms theory seems far from over. The theories of Lombroso that, in the middle of the nineteenth century, have affected the course of investigations and criminal trials have once again been used to achieve ...
Ciliberti R.   +3 more
semanticscholar   +5 more sources

The Lombroso Museum in Turin: A reflection on the exhibition and scientific study of human remains

2016
Il contributo ripercorre la vicenda della contestazione contro il Museo Lombroso e fa il punto sulla vertenza giudiziaria relativa alla richiesta di restituzione del cranio di Giuseppe Villella alla luce della normativa piu ...
Garlandini, Alberto, MONTALDO, Silvano
semanticscholar   +6 more sources

Rebury the “Atavistic Skull” Studied by Lombroso?

American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology, 2019
On May 16, 2017, the judgment of the Italian court ended the legal battle concerning the repatriation request of the famous skull, belonging to the “brigand” Giuseppe Villella. During the autopsy examination on the corpse of Villella, Lombroso observed a
R. Ciliberti, G. Armocida, M. Licata
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

Reversing Criminology’s White Gaze: As Lombroso’s Disembodied Head Peers Through a Glass Jar in a Museum Foreshadowed by Sara Baartman’s Ghost

2017
The academic field of criminology is implicitly colonizing. Criminology’s positivism in particular was founded through Western Europe’s colonizing empires and has, for hundreds of years, been growing and instituting the legacies of white supremacy through which these empires gain strength (Agozino 2003).
Viviane Saleh-Hanna
openaire   +2 more sources

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