Journal

It's like every other job: a consideration of forensic specialists professional identities in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Human Remains and Violence, Volume 2, No. 1 (2016), pp. 75-94
Author
Andrea M. Szkil
Publication Year
2016
Region
Europe and Central Asia
Thematic Area
Forensics
Topic
Management of the Dead / Mental Health
Access
Open access

The subject of forensic specialist‘s work with human remains in the aftermath of conflict has remained largely unexplored within the existing literature. Drawing upon anthropological fieldwork conducted from 2009–10 in three mortuary facilities overseen by the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP) in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), this article analyses observations of and interviews with ICMP forensic specialists as a means of gaining insight into their experiences with the remains of people who went missing during the 1992–95 war in BiH. The article specifically focuses on how forensic specialists construct and maintain their professional identities within an emotionally charged situation. Through analysing forensic specialists encounters with human remains, it is argued that maintaining a professional identity requires ICMP forensic specialists to navigate between emotional attachment and engagement according to each situation.