The Missing and the Marginalized: A Biocultural Approach to Forensic Anthropology at the US/Mexico Border

Author:

Adams Elise J.1ORCID,Goliath Jesse R.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology and Middle Eastern Cultures, Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS 39762, USA

2. Cobb Institute of Archaeology, Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS 39762, USA

Abstract

Violence and trauma are nestled in human rights violations worldwide. Since the 1980s, several international and domestic organizations have formed to conduct investigations following instances of political unrest and sociocultural violence. These inhumane events are evidenced by structural violence, an invisible trauma that exacerbates societal discrepancies within a population and can manifest harm to marginalized groups. Structural violence can be observed in both living individuals and through the treatment of human remains. Individuals who are missing or remain unidentified from violent outbreaks are often from marginalized groups. Therefore, a biocultural approach is necessary as it emphasizes the interplay between biology, environment, and culture. Recent work on human rights violations in the Americas has focused on fatalities due to increased migration at the US/Mexico border. Multiple organizations from the United States and other countries have developed strategies to assist in the recovery, identification, and repatriation of migrants. We aim to highlight the biocultural approach in these humanitarian actions, especially the practice of forensic anthropology, with structural violence and humanitarian identification efforts related to the missing and unidentified persons found along the US/Mexico border.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference45 articles.

1. Latham, K., and O’Daniel, A. (2018). Sociopolitics of Migrant Death and Repatriation: Perspectives from Forensic Science, Springer.

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3. The Bioarchaeology of Structural Violence and Dissection in the 19th-Century United States;Nystrom;Am. Anthropol.,2014

4. Byrnes, J.F., and Sandoval-Cervantes, I. (2022). The Marginalized in Death: A Forensic Anthropology of Intersectional Identity in the Modern Era, Lexington Books.

5. Byrnes, J.F., and Sandoval-Cervantes, I. (2022). The Marginalized in Death: A Forensic Anthropology of Intersectional Identity in the Modern Era, Lexington Books.

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