The 2005 ‘Palmer Inquiry’ highlighted the urgent need for the development of a national missing persons database, however a decade later Australia still does not have a national capability dedicated to missing persons identification. With an estimated 500 cases of unidentified human remains and 2000 long-term missing persons in Australia, there is still a pressing need for the establishment of a national identification program. I believe a DNA-led approach is essential for the effective and efficient identification of Australia’s unknown and missing citizens. Despite DNA being used worldwide to identify large numbers of victims of war, genocide or mass disasters, the processing of DNA samples for routine missing persons investigations is un...
The application of DNA profiling in the criminal justice system is an important issue facing Austral...
Overview DNA evidence has made a significant contribution to criminal investigations in Australia a...
Law enforcement and Disaster Management Agencies within Governments spend substantial resources to i...
I was awarded a 2015 Churchill Fellowship to visit international laboratories which have specialisat...
The trauma of having a family member missing is commonly described as an ambiguous loss where the fi...
In 2004, a survey was sent to forensic organisations in every jurisdiction in Australia and New Zeal...
The report investigates risk factors and at-risk groups, noting the limitations in recording data. I...
Armed conflict in Colombia has played an important role in the missing people phenomenon, in which t...
Australia lacks efficient means of identifying human remains, writes Daniel Franklin in The Conversa...
The challenges in Washington State for missing and unidentified persons are complex and part of a na...
This paper critically analyses the use of the National Crime Investigation DNA Database (NCIDD) and ...
Between 2008 and 2015 over 305,000 people were reported missing in Australia, an average of 38,159 r...
Since 1997 the analysis of DNA recovered from handled objects, or 'trace' DNA, has become routine an...
DNA analysis was first applied to the identification of victims of armed conflicts and other situati...
Forensic DNA profiling is now a routine feature of the criminal justice system in Australia. Its app...
The application of DNA profiling in the criminal justice system is an important issue facing Austral...
Overview DNA evidence has made a significant contribution to criminal investigations in Australia a...
Law enforcement and Disaster Management Agencies within Governments spend substantial resources to i...
I was awarded a 2015 Churchill Fellowship to visit international laboratories which have specialisat...
The trauma of having a family member missing is commonly described as an ambiguous loss where the fi...
In 2004, a survey was sent to forensic organisations in every jurisdiction in Australia and New Zeal...
The report investigates risk factors and at-risk groups, noting the limitations in recording data. I...
Armed conflict in Colombia has played an important role in the missing people phenomenon, in which t...
Australia lacks efficient means of identifying human remains, writes Daniel Franklin in The Conversa...
The challenges in Washington State for missing and unidentified persons are complex and part of a na...
This paper critically analyses the use of the National Crime Investigation DNA Database (NCIDD) and ...
Between 2008 and 2015 over 305,000 people were reported missing in Australia, an average of 38,159 r...
Since 1997 the analysis of DNA recovered from handled objects, or 'trace' DNA, has become routine an...
DNA analysis was first applied to the identification of victims of armed conflicts and other situati...
Forensic DNA profiling is now a routine feature of the criminal justice system in Australia. Its app...
The application of DNA profiling in the criminal justice system is an important issue facing Austral...
Overview DNA evidence has made a significant contribution to criminal investigations in Australia a...
Law enforcement and Disaster Management Agencies within Governments spend substantial resources to i...