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<div><font color="#660000" size="4"><b>STS Circle at Harvard</b></font></div>
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<div><b><br></b></div>
<div><font size="+1"><b>Lindsay Smith<br></b></font></div>
<div><i>UCLA</i></div>
<div><font color="#000000" size="4"><i><br></i></font></div>
<div><font color="#000000"><font size="4">on</font><br><br></font></div>
<p style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif;" class="MsoNormal"><font size="4"><b>“Genetics is a study in faith”: the Disappeared of Latin
America, science as development, and the fragility of identification</b></font></p>
<font size="+1"><b><br></b></font>
<div><font color="#000000" size="4">Monday, September 26th</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000" size="4">12:15-2:00 p.m.</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000" size="4">124 Mt. Auburn Street, Suite 100, Room
106</font></div>
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<div><font color="#000000">Lunch is provided if you RSVP.</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000">Please RSVP to</font> <a href="mailto:sts@hks.harvard.edu" target="_blank"><font color="#000000">sts</font></a><a href="mailto:sts@hks.harvard.edu" target="_blank"><font color="#000000">@hks.harvard.edu</font></a><font color="#000000"> by
5pm Thursday, September 22nd.</font></div>
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<div><b>Abstract:</b>
In the last half of the twentieth century, hundreds of
thousands of Latin Americans were forcibly disappeared as dictatorial leaders
waged brutal counter-insurgency wars to stamp out communism on the continent.
In the aftermath, scientists became key human rights activists as they remade
forensic anthropology and human genetics to document genocide and return the
dead and missing to searching families. Based in racial typing, forensics, and
genetics these new methods both reinforced and remade human identification by
linking biological and technological determinism, surveillance, and spaces of
indigenous revival and collective mourning and remembrance. In this paper, I
analyze an example of the contradictory and contested politics of human
identification: the Latin American Initiative to Identify the Disappeared, a US
funded DNA analysis project. Drawing on fieldwork in Guatemala and Argentina, I
explore the implications of an international paradigm grounded in DNA
databanking as human rights work, development, and security. I suggest that the
material and political fragility of identification both supercedes and
undermines these goals, creating new configurations of biopower and unexpected
spaces of biofallibility.
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<div><b>Biography</b>:
Lindsay Smith is a medical anthropologist and postdoctoral
fellow at the Center for Society and Genetics at University of California, Los
Angeles. She received her PhD from Harvard University in Social Anthropology in
2008 and was previously a fellow in Science and Human Culture at Northwestern
University. Her book manuscript, <i>Subversive
Genes: Making human rights and DNA in Argentina </i>focuses on the development
of forensic genetics as a tool for transitional justice and democracy building.
She recently published “Emotional Engagements: Acknowledgement, Advocacy and
Direct Action” co-authored with Arthur Kleinman in the edited collection <i>Emotions in the Field</i>. As an
ethnographic filmmaker, she has made films in collaboration with Argentine
human rights groups. Her documentary, <i>Aparcion
con Vida</i>/ Bring them Back Alive examines the use of DNA in the search for
children kidnapped during the Argentine “Dirty War”. She is currently studying
the Latin American Initiative to Identify the Disappeared (LIID), a
multinational scientific collaboration to use large-scale DNA databanking to
identify the Disappeared of Argentina, Guatemala, and Peru.
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<div><font color="#000000">A complete list of STS Circle at Harvard
events can be found on our website:</font></div>
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