Journal

Using forensic science to care for the dead and search for the missing: In conversation with Dr Morris Tidball-Binz

International Review of the Red Cross (2017), 99 (2), 689–707. The missing doi:10.1017/S1816383118000449
Author
Dr Morris Tidball-Binz
Publication Year
2017
Region
Global
Thematic Area
The Search Process / Forensics
Topic
Management of the Dead / Identification / DNA Analysis
Access
Open access

Dr Morris Tidball-Binz is a forensic doctor who joined the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in 2004 and has since worked for the organization in numerous contexts, helping to develop its novel forensic capacity. Having begun his career with forensic and human rights organizations, he helped pioneer in his native South America the application of forensic science to human rights investigations, particularly the search for the disappeared. He helped create the ICRC's Forensic Unit, of which he was the first Director until early 2017; he then headed the forensic operation for the Humanitarian Project Plan. He is currently the Forensic Manager for the ICRC's new Missing Persons Project. He spoke with the Review to share his insights on the development of humanitarian forensic action and its role in protecting the dead and clarifying the fate of missing persons.