Suspect Identities: A History of Fingerprinting and Criminal Identification

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Harvard University Press, Jun 30, 2009 - Social Science - 381 pages
No two fingerprints are alike, or so it goes. For nearly a hundred years fingerprints have represented definitive proof of individual identity in our society. We trust them to tell us who committed a crime, whether a criminal record exists, and how to resolve questions of disputed identity. But in Suspect Identities, Simon Cole reveals that the history of criminal identification is far murkier than we have been led to believe. Cole traces the modern system of fingerprint identification to the nineteenth-century bureaucratic state, and its desire to track and control increasingly mobile, diverse populations whose race or ethnicity made them suspect in the eyes of authorities. In an intriguing history that traverses the globe, taking us to India, Argentina, France, England, and the United States, Cole excavates the forgotten history of criminal identification--from photography to exotic anthropometric systems based on measuring body parts, from fingerprinting to DNA typing. He reveals how fingerprinting ultimately won the trust of the public and the law only after a long battle against rival identification systems. As we rush headlong into the era of genetic identification, and as fingerprint errors are being exposed, this history uncovers the fascinating interplay of our elusive individuality, police and state power, and the quest for scientific certainty. Suspect Identities offers a necessary corrective to blind faith in the infallibility of technology, and a compelling look at its role in defining each of us.
 

Contents

Jekylls and Hydes
1
1 Impostors and Incorrigible Rogues
6
2 Measuring the Criminal Body
32
3 Native Prints
60
4 Degenerate Fingerprints
97
5 Fingerprinting Foreigners
119
6 From Anthropometry to Dactyloscopy
140
7 Bloody Fingerprints and Brazen Experts
168
9 Identification at a Distance
217
10 Digital Digits
235
11 Fraud Fabrication and False Positives
259
12 The Genetic Age
287
Bodily Identities
303
Notes
313
Credits
347
Acknowledgments
349

8 Dazzling Demonstrations and Easy Assumptions
190

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