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1.10: Forensic Associations and Organizations

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    52943
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    Your author greatly supports the many international associations and organizations that provide for industrial oversight, sponsored research, educational standards, ethics and integrity guidelines, and objective collaboration of forensic science professionals. The following is a brief list of some of these entities:

    American Association of Forensic Sciences (AAFS)

    Founded in 1948, the American Academy of Forensic Sciences (AAFS) is a professional organization that is dedicated to the advancement of the forensic sciences and its application to the legal system. The AAFS has a membership of over 6,000 representatives in the United States and 71 other countries. Members represent professional forensic pathologists, attorneys, dentists, toxicologists, anthropologists, document examiners, digital evidence experts, psychiatrists, engineers, physicists, chemists, criminalists, educators, researchers, and others. The AAFS is also instrumental in developing and maintaining up-to-date industrials standards in the forensic sciences and the training disciplines associated with the forensic sciences.

    The International Association for Identification

    The International Association for Identification (IAI) is the oldest and the largest association for forensic science practitioners with over 7,000 members. Founded in 1915, the association responsible for administering certification examinations for the following disciplines: Bloodstain Pattern Analysis, Crime Scene Investigations, Latent Print Examiner, Ten-Print Examiner, Forensic Photography, Forensic Art, Footwear Comparison, and Forensic Video. They also publish the Journal of Forensic Identification, a masterful work of forensic science research studies and educational papers.

    The British Academy of Forensic Sciences

    The British Academy of Forensic Sciences was found in 1995 in the United Kingdom. According to their website, www.bafs.org.uk, the BAFS is, “an interdisciplinary organisation that adds a breadth of understanding to the scientist as they engage with others in the forensic arena: lawyers, pathologists, clinicians and psychiatrists amongst others The Academy has a programme of world-renowned speakers and organises specialist technical meetings. Students are encouraged to attend and the meetings are normally free for those studying or in the early stages of their careers. The Academy also offers prizes annually in the three disciplines: medicine, science and the law, and publishes its own journal.”

    The International Association of Bloodstain Pattern Analysts

    The International Association of Bloodstain Pattern Analysts (IABPA) was founded in 1983 by Professor Herbert MacDonell, the Father of Modern Bloodstain Pattern Analysis, in Corning, New York. The IABPA has about 900 members representing bloodstain pattern analysts from around the world who are dedicated to the advancement of this forensic discipline.

    The Association for Crime Scene Reconstruction

    The Association for Crime Scene Reconstruction (ASCR) was established in 1991 by a group of professionals representing the forensic science that focuses on the forensic sciences and the examination of the documentation, analysis, preserved evidence, and the sequencing of events of crime scenes that allow them to reconstruct the circumstances related to the crime. The ASCR also publishes the Journal, a membership publication, focused on the forensic sciences.


    This page titled 1.10: Forensic Associations and Organizations is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by David Doglietto.

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