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TABLE OF CONTENTS<br/>Section I: History, theory, practice and legal foundation <br/><br/>1. Using forensic science to care for the dead and search for the missing: In conversation with Morris Tidball-Binz<br/>Morris Tidball-Binz, Email: mtidballbinz@icrc.org<br/><br/>2. The protection of the missing and the dead under international law<br/>Ximena Londoño Romanowsky and Marisela Silva Chau*, Email: masilvachau@icrc.org<br/><br/>3. Extraordinary deathwork: New developments in, and the social significance of, forensic humanitarian action<br/>Claire Moon, Email: c.moon@lse.ac.uk<br/><br/>4. Between darts and bullets: A bioarchaeological view on the study of Human Rights and IHL violations<br/>Maria del Carmen Vega Dulanto, Email: vega.m@pucp.edu.pe<br/><br/>5. Posthumous dignity and the importance in returning remains of the deceased<br/>Sian Cook, Email: s.cook2@uos.ac.uk<br/><br/>6. Unidentified deceased persons: Social life, social death and humanitarian action<br/>Roberto C. Parra*, Email: ropachi@gmail.com, Pierre Perich, Élisabeth Anstett, and Jane E. Buikstra<br/><br/>7. A forensic perspective on the new disappeared: Migration revisited<br/>Jose Pablo Baraybar*, Email: baraybarjp@gmail.com, Ines Caridi, and Jill Stockwell<br/><br/>8. Iran: the impact of the beliefscape on the risk culture, resilience and disaster risk governance<br/>Michaela Ibrion, Email: mibrion5@gmail.com<br/><br/>9. The search for the missing from a humanitarian approach as a Peruvian national policy<br/>Monica Barriga, Email: mbarriga@minjus.gob.pe<br/><br/>10. Humanitarian forensic action in the Marawi crisis<br/>Sarah Ellinghan*, Email: sellingham@icrc.org and Derek Benedix<br/><br/>Section II: Forensic basic information to trace missing persons<br/><br/>11. Integration of information on missing persons and unidentified human remains: Best practices<br/>Diana Emilce Ramirez Páez, Email: psiyana@hotmail.com<br/><br/>12. Forensic archaeology and humanitarian context: Localization, recovery and documentation of human remains<br/>Flavio Antonio Estrada Moreno*, Email: flavio_estrada@hotmail.com and Patricia Maita<br/><br/>13. Applications of physiological bases of aging to forensic science: New advances<br/>Sara C. Zapico*, Email: saiczapico@gmail.com, Douglas H. Ubelaker, and Joe Adserias-Garriga<br/><br/>14. Adult skeletal sex estimation and the global standardization<br/>Heather M. Garvin and Alexandra R. Klales*, Email: alexandra.klales@gmail.com<br/><br/>15. Sexual dimorphism in juvenile skeletons and its real problem<br/>Flavio Antonio Estrada Moreno, Email: flavio_estrada@hotmail.com<br/><br/>16. Dental Aging Methods and Population Variation<br/>Joe Adserias-Garriga*, Email: mjadserias@hotmail.com and Joel Ignacio Tejada Arana<br/><br/>17. Age assessment in unaccompanied minors: A review<br/>Jose Luis Prieto, Email: jlprietocarrero@gmail.com<br/><br/>18. Interdisciplinary approach and technological innovation for dealing with forensic humanitarian cases in complex scenarios<br/>Ginna P. Camacho C*, Email: gcamacho@equitas.org.co, Luz Adriana Pérez, and Diana Arango G.<br/><br/>Section III: Stable isotopes forensics and search of missing persons<br/><br/>19. The role of stable isotope analysis in forensic anthropology<br/>Douglas H. Ubelaker*, Email: UBELAKED@si.edu and Caroline Francescutti<br/><br/>20. Basic principles of stable isotope analysis in humanitarian forensic science<br/>Lesley A. Chesson*, Email: Lesley.Chesson@pae.com, Gregory E. Berg, Clement P. Bataille, Eric J. Bartelink, and Michael P. Richards and Wolfram Meier-Augenstein,<br/><br/>21. Andean isoscapes: Creating and testing oxygen isoscape models to aid in the identification of missing persons in Peru<br/>James Zimmer-Dauphinee, Beth K. Scaffidi, and Tiffiny A.Tung*, Email: t.tung@vanderbilt.edu<br/><br/>22. Finding family, finding home: Applying predictive isotope model and other forensic tools on unidentified deceased in Peru<br/>Martha R. Palma*, Email: palmamalaga@gmail.com, Roberto C. Parra, Lucio A. Condori and Tiffiny A. Tung<br/><br/>23. Utility of stable isotope ratios of tap water and human hair in determining region of origin in Central and Southern Mexico: Modeling relationships between δ2H and δ18O isotope inputs in modern Mexican hair<br/>Chelsey Juarez*, Email: chelsey.juarez@gmail.com, Robin Ramey, David T. Flaherty, and Belinda S. Akpa<br/><br/>24. Multi-Isotope approaches for region of origin predictions of undocumented border crossers from the U.S./Mexico Border: Biocultural perspectives on diet and travel history<br/>Eric J. Bartelink*, Email: ebartelink@csuchico.edu, Lesley Chesson, Bret Tipple, Sarah Hall, and Robyn Kramer<br/><br/>25. Spatial distribution of stable isotope values of human hair: Tools for region of origin and travel history assignment<br/>Luciano O. Valenzuela*, Email: lucianoovalenzuela@gmail.com, Lesley A. Chesson, Gabriel Bowen, Thure E. Cerling, and Jim R. Ehleringer<br/><br/>26. Applicability of stable isotope analysis to the Colombian human identification crisis<br/>Daniel Castellanos Gutiérrez*, Email: dacaste@gmail.com, Elizabeth A. DiGangi, and Jonathan D. Bethard<br/><br/>27. Application of stable isotopes and geostatistics to infer region of geographic origin for deceased undocumented Latin American migrants<br/>Robyn T. Kramer*, Email: rtkramer92@gmail.com, Eric J. Bartelink, Nick Herrmann, Clement Bataille, and Kate Spradley<br/><br/>28. Tracking geographic patterns of contemporary human diet in Brazil using stable isotopes of nail keratin<br/>Gabriela Bielefeld Nardoto*, Email: gbnardoto@gmail.com, João Paulo Sena-Souza, Lesley A. Chesson, and Luiz Antonio Martinelli<br/><br/>Section IV: DNA Analysis and Forensic Identification Process<br/><br/>29. Phenotypic markers for forensic purposes<br/>Ana Freire-Aradas*, Email: ana.freire3@hotmail.com, Christopher Phillips, Victoria Lareu Huidobro, and Ángel Carracedo<br/><br/>30. Genetic structure and kinship analysis from Peruvian Andean area: Limitations and recommendation for DNA identification on missing persons<br/>Gian Carlo Iannacone*, Email: ggiannacone@yahoo.com and Roberto C. Parra*, Email: ropachi@gmail.com<br/><br/>31. Short tandem repeat markers applied to the identification of human remains<br/>William Goodwin*, Email: WHGoodwin@uclan.ac.uk, Hassain M.H. Alsafiah, and Ali A.H. Al-Janabi<br/><br/>32. Genetics without non-genetic data in Colombian experience: Forensic difficulties for the correct identification<br/>Manuel Paredes, Email: manuel.paredes@medicinalegal.gov.co<br/><br/>33. Is DNA always the answer?<br/>Caroline Bennett, Email: caroline.bennett@vuw.ac.nz<br/><br/>Section V: Identifying deceased and finding missing persons<br/><br/>34. Migrant deaths along the Texas/Mexico border: A collaborative approach to forensic identification of human remains<br/>Kate Spradley*, Email: mks@txstate.edu and Timothy Gocha<br/><br/>35. The Argentine experience in forensic identification of human remains<br/>Mercedes Salado*, Email: msaladopuerto@gmail.com, Laura Catelli, Carola Romanini, Magdalena Romero, and Carlos Vullo<br/><br/>36. The approach to unidentified dead migrants in Italy<br/>Cristina Cattaneo*, Email: cristina.cattaneo@unimi.it, Debora Mazzarelli, Lara Olivieri, Danilo De Angelis, Annalisa Cappella, Albarita Vitale, Giulia Caccia, Vittorio Piscitelli, and Agata Iadicicco<br/><br/>37. Identification of human skeletal remains at the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) laboratory<br/>Angi M. Christensen*, Email: angi.m.christensen@gmail.com, Ann D. Fasano, Richard B. Marx, John E.B. Stewart, Lisa G. Bailey, and Richard M. Thomas<br/><br/>38. Forensic human identification: An Australian perspective<br/>Soren Blau, Email: soren.blau@vifm.org<br/><br/>39. Forensic ıdentification of human remains in Cyprus: The humanitarian work of the Committee on Missing Persons (CMP)<br/>Gülbanu K. Zorba*, Email: gulbanu.zorba@cmp-cyprus.org, Theodora Eleftheriou, İstenç Engin, Sophia Hartsioti, and Christiana Zenonos<br/><br/>40. Forensic human identification during humanitarian crisis in Guatemala: Volcán de Fuego deadly eruption<br/>Daniel Jimenez, Email: daniel.jimenez.gaytan@gmail.com<br/><br/>41. Peruvian forensic experience in the search for missing persons and the identification of human remains: History, limitations, and future challenges.<br/>Roberto C. Parra*, Email: ropachi@gmail.com, Martha R. Palma, Oswaldo Calcina, Joel Ignacio Tejada Arana, Lucio A. Condori and Jose Pablo Baraybar<br/><br/>42. Forensic identification of human remains in Uruguay<br/>Alicia Lusiardo*, Email: nibya@yahoo.com, Ximena Salvo, Gustavo Casanova, Natalia Azziz, Rodrigo Bongiovanni, Matías López, and Sofía Rodríguez<br/><br/>43. Forensic analysis of the unidentified dead in Costa Rica from 2000 to the present<br/>Georgina Pacheco-Revilla*, Email: gepare@gmail.com and Derek Congram<br/><br/>44. Identifying the unknown and the undocumented: The Johannesburg (South Africa) experience<br/>Desiré Brits*, Email: Desire.Brits@wits.ac.za, Maryna Steyn, and Candice Hansmeyer<br/><br/>45. The Colombian experience in forensic identifications process<br/>Jairo Vivas and Claudia Vega*, Email: clauvega_497@hotmail.com<br/><br/>46. Chilean experience in forensic identification of human remains<br/>Marisol Intriago*, Email: marisol.intriago.mi@gmail.com, Viviana Uribe, and Claudia Garrido<br/><br/>Section VI: Conclusions<br/><br/>47. Humanitarian action: New approaches from forensic science<br/>Douglas H. Ubelaker, Sara C. Zapico, and Roberto C. Parra*, Email: ropachi@gmail.com |