Speaking of Sex: Critical Reflections for Forensic Anthropologists

Author:

Flaherty Taylor M.1ORCID,Johnson Liam J.1ORCID,Woollen Katharine C.1ORCID,Lopez Dayanira1,Gaddis Katherine1ORCID,Horsley SaMoura L.1,Byrnes Jennifer F.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, 4505 S. Maryland Pkwy, Las Vegas, NV 89154, USA

Abstract

Forensic anthropologists have a responsibility to appropriately relay information about a decedent in medicolegal reports and when communicating with the public. The terms ‘sex’ and ‘sex estimation’ have been applied with numerous, inconsistent definitions under the guise that sex—a broad, complex concept—can be reduced to a female/male binary. This binary does not reflect biocultural realities and harms those whose bodies do not meet social expectations of maleness or femaleness. The University of Nevada, Las Vegas’ Forensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology Laboratory (UNLV FAB Lab) advocates for the use of the term ‘assigned sex at birth’ (ASAB) to highlight that binary sex is not biologically inherent to the body, but rather, assigned by society. Additionally, we call for the use of disclaimers in case reports to denote the limitations of ASAB estimation methods, the differentiation between those with mixed trait expression (i.e., indeterminate) and those on whom an ASAB analysis cannot be performed (i.e., unknown), and the included consideration of gender in forensic anthropology research and case reports. Such applications challenge biological normalcy, allowing forensic anthropologists to actively advocate for those whose bodies do not meet biocultural expectations.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference185 articles.

1. National Institute of Standards and Technology, U.S., and Department of Commerce Forensic Anthropology Subcommittee (2023, October 02). ANSI/ASB Standard 132, Standard for Population Affinity Estimation in Forensic Anthropology, First Edition. Available online: https://www.aafs.org/sites/default/files/media/documents/132_Std_e1.pdf.

2. Evaluating population affinity estimates in forensic anthropology: Insights from the forensic anthropology database for assessing methods accuracy (FADAMA);Winburn;J. Forensic Sci.,2021

3. What Are We Really Estimating in Forensic Anthropological Practice, Population Affinity or Ancestry?;Spradley;Forensic Anthropol.,2021

4. Ross, A.H., and Williams, S.E. (2021). Ancestry studies in forensic anthropology: Back on the frontier of racism. Biology, 10.

5. The need to incorporate human variation and evolutionary theory in forensic anthropology: A call for reform;Ross;Am. J. Phys. Anthropol.,2021

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