Rafaela Granja
Rafaela Granja holds a PhD in Sociology (2015) and is currently a post-doctoral researcher in the project “EXCHANGE – Forensic Geneticists and the Transnational Exchange of DNA data in the EU: Engaging Science with Social Control, Citizenship and Democracy”(ref. 648608), funded by European Research Council (ERC) and led by Helena Machado. Based on digital ethnographies and other qualitative methodologies her current research explores controversies around the intersections of family, genetics, and crime in different disciplines. Her previous work has focused on reconfigurations of family relationships inside and outside prisons.Rafaela Granja holds a PhD in Sociology (2015) and is currently a post-doctoral researcher in the project “EXCHANGE – Forensic Geneticists and the Transnational Exchange of DNA data in the EU: Engaging Science with Social Control, Citizenship and Democracy”(ref. 648608), funded by European Research Council (ERC) and led by Helena Machado. Based on digital ethnographies and other qualitative methodologies her current research explores controversies around the intersections of family, genetics, and crime in different disciplines. Her previous work has focused on reconfigurations of family relationships inside and outside prisons.
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Rafaela Granja holds a PhD in Sociology (2015) and is currently a post-doctoral researcher in the project “EXCHANGE – Forensic Geneticists and the Transnational Exchange of DNA data in the EU: Engaging Science with Social Control, Citizenship and Democracy”(ref. 648608), funded by European Research Council (ERC) and led by Helena Machado. Based on digital ethnographies and other qualitative methodologies her current research explores controversies around the intersections of family, genetics, and crime in different disciplines. Her previous work has focused on reconfigurations of family relationships inside and outside prisons.
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Forensic Genetics in the Governance of Crime
This open access book uses a critical sociological perspective to explore contemporary ways of reformulating the governance of crime through genetics. Through the lens of scientific knowledge and genetic technology, Machado and Granja offer a unique perspective on current trends in crime governance. They explore the place and role of genetics in criminal justice systems, and show how classical and contemporary social theory can help address challenges posed by social processes and interactions generated by the uses, meanings, and expectations attributed to genetics in the governance of crime. Cutting-edge methods and research techniques are also integrated to address crucial aspects of this social reality. Finally, the authors examine new challenges emerging from recent paradigm shifts within forensic genetics, moving away from the construction of evidence as presented in court to the production of intelligence guiding criminal investigations.