Background information for the interview notes that NIJ's Forensic Technology Center of Excellence (FTCoE), which sponsors the Just Science series, will help support key international agencies selected by the HHRRC to improve the practice of forensic science and strengthen its impact on humanitarian and human rights issues through training/education and the dissemination of best practices and guidelines for investigating human rights violations. Dr. Ubelaker is Chair of the HHRRC. He indicates that although individual members of the AAFS had participated in the application of forensic science practices in humanitarian and human rights projects prior to the creation of HHRRC, the HHRRC promotes and manages a more focused effort to improve the impacts of forensic science on investigations into potential human rights violations. The HHRRC has addressed the forensic issues of evidence preservation, training, research, and capacity-building throughout the world. Research discussed in this interview focuses on the identification of skeletal remains from the mass violence in Cambodia, development of the capacity of anthropology in Mexico, and how nerve agents are incorporated into bones.
Longitudinal Patterns of Legal Socialization in First-Generation Immigrants, Second-Generation Immigrants, and Native-Born Serious Youthful Offenders
NCJ Number
252381
Journal
Crime & Delinquency Volume: 62 Issue: 11 Dated: 2017 Pages: 1403-1425
Date Published
November 2016
Length
23 pages
Annotation
This study used the legal socialization framework and data from the Pathways to Desistance study in assessing legal socialization perceptions among first-generation immigrants, second-generation immigrants, and native-born serious youthful offenders.
Abstract