数据主权和法医调查基因谱系(FIGG):人道主义和万人坑调查的前进道路

T. Dowdeswell
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摘要

本文讨论了人道主义调查中法医调查基因谱系(FIGG)的伦理治理问题,这些调查旨在识别万人坑中的死者、灾难受害者,并重建过去的暴行。FIGG比现有的法医DNA方法(如CODIS数据库中的部分匹配)更适合于人类遗骸调查,因此它的使用有所增加。然而,幸存者社区可能不会从使用FIGG来重建过去的事件和促进愈合与和解的目标中受益,除非我们首先解决FIGG在人道主义调查中的道德治理的几个紧迫问题。其中包括幸存者社区缺乏信任,对隐私、自主权、知情同意的担忧,以及未来基因数据的使用导致不愿意为法医调查提供DNA。本文着眼于土著数据主权的运动,它假设数据的控制权应该放在那些受其使用影响最大的人手中,并且它有可能被用作所有人道主义调查中FIGG道德治理的蓝图。FIGG调查人员最近应用数据主权的例子说明了这一点:私人的、非营利性的DNA司法数据库,以及爱尔兰图姆母婴之家的万人坑调查。
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Data Sovereignty & Forensic Investigative Genetic Genealogy (FIGG): A Path Forward For Humanitarian & Mass Graves Investigations
This paper addresses several issues concerning the ethical governance of forensic investigative genetic genealogy (FIGG) in humanitarian investigations that seek to identify decedents in mass graves, disaster victims, and to reconstruct past atrocities. FIGG is better suited to human remains investigations than existing forensic DNA methods, such as partial matching in CODIS databases, and for this reason its use has increased. However, survivor communities may not benefit from the use of FIGG to reconstruct past events and promote the goals of healing and reconciliation unless we first address several pressing issues with the ethical governance of FIGG in humanitarian investigations. These include a lack of trust on the part of survivor communities, concerns over privacy, autonomy, informed consent, and the future uses of genetic data that generate an unwillingness to provide DNA for forensic investigations. This paper looks at the movement of Indigenous data sovereignty, which posits that control over data should be put in the hands of those who are most affected by its use, and its potential to be used as a blueprint for the ethical governance of FIGG in all humanitarian investigations. This is illustrated through recent examples of data sovereignty being applied by FIGG investigators: the private, non-profit DNA Justice database, and the mass graves investigations at the Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, Ireland.
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