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علم صحنه‌های جرم

The Science of Crime Scenes

جلد کتاب علم صحنه‌های جرم

معرفی کتاب «علم صحنه‌های جرم» (با عنوان لاتین The Science of Crime Scenes) نوشتهٔ McAdam, Terence J.; Houck, Max M.; Crispino, Frank، منتشرشده توسط نشر Academic Press در سال 2012. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.

The recent National Research Council's report on forensic science calls for more fundamental education and training in the science behind the discipline. Nowhere is this need greater than in crime scene investigations. Long seen as merely "bagging and tagging," crime scene investigation and processing is now a complex process, involving numerous sciences and methods. __The Science of Crime Scenes__ addresses the science behind the scenes and demonstrates the latest methods and technologies in depth. The __Science of Crime Scenes__ covers the philosophy of crime scenes as historical events, the personnel involved at a scene (including the media), the detection of criminal traces and their reconstruction, and special crime scenes, such as mass disasters and terroristic events. Written by an international trio of authors with decades of crime scene experience, __The Science of Crime Scenes__ is the next generation of crime scene textbooks. * Offers a science-based approach to crime scene investigation * Includes in-depth coverage of disasters and mass murder, terror crime scenes, and CBRN (chemical, biological, radioactive and nuclear) – not covered in any other text * Written by an international trio of authors with decades of crime scene experience * Instructor website with lecture slides, test bank, outlines, definitions, and activities, and a student companion site with an image collection Content: Front-matter,Copyright,Dedication,Foreword,Acknowledgments,IntroductionEntitled to full textSection 1: The Science of Crime Scene InvestigationChapter 1.0 - The “Forensic Mindset”, Pages 3-9 Chapter 1.1 - From Scene to Laboratory to Court, Pages 11-19 Chapter 2.0 - What Is a Crime Scene?, Pages 21-26 Chapter 2.1 - Crime Scene Intelligence: Connecting People, Places, and Things, Pages 27-39 Chapter 3.0 - Personnel, Pages 43-52 Chapter 3.1 - First Responder on the Scene, Pages 53-64 Chapter 3.2 - The Investigator in Charge, Pages 65-69 Chapter 3.3 - The Forensic Team: Officers, Scientists, and Specialists, Pages 71-79 Chapter 3.4 - Nonforensic Personnel: Superiors, Officials, and the Media, Pages 81-87 Chapter 4.0 - General Crime Scene Procedure, Pages 89-93 Chapter 4.1 - “Freezing” the Scene and the Three R’s (Recognize, Recover, and Record), Pages 95-103 Chapter 4.2 - The Chain of Custody, Pages 105-112 Chapter 4.3 - Recording the Scene: Sketching, Photography, and Video, Pages 113-126 Chapter 5.0 - Searching for Evidence: Recovery, Pages 129-138 Chapter 5.1 - Detecting, Pages 139-155 Chapter 5.2 - Collection, Pages 157-176 Chapter 5.3 - Preserving, Pages 177-185 Chapter 5.4 - Submitting Evidence to the Laboratory, Pages 187-205 Chapter 6.0 - Evidence Types and Enhancement, Pages 207-209 Chapter 6.1 - Chemical Evidence, Pages 211-237 Chapter 6.2 - Biological Evidence, Pages 239-258 Chapter 6.3 - Impression Evidence, Pages 259-293 Chapter 6.4 - Other Types of Evidence, Pages 295-312 Chapter 7.0 - Crime Scene Reconstruction, Pages 313-316 Chapter 7.1 - An Archaeological Approach, Pages 317-321 Chapter 7.2 - Bloodstain Pattern Analysis, Pages 323-330 Chapter 7.3 - Photogrammetry and 3D Reconstruction1, Pages 331-345 Chapter 8.0 - Special Crime Scenes, Pages 349-350 Chapter 8.1 - Disaster and Mass Fatalities, Pages 351-356 Chapter 8.2 - Terrorist Crime Scenes, Pages 357-361 Chapter 8.3 - CBRN Crime Scenes, Pages 363-372 Chapter 8.4 - Underwater and Underground Crime Scenes1, Pages 373-386 Index, Pages 387-392

The recent National Research Council's report on forensic science calls for more fundamental education and training in the science behind the discipline. Nowhere is this need greater than in crime scene investigations. Long seen as merely "bagging and tagging," crime scene investigation and processing is now a complex process, involving numerous sciences and methods. The Science of Crime Scenes addresses the science behind the scenes and demonstrates the latest methods and technologies in depth.

The Science of Crime Scenes covers the philosophy of crime scenes as historical events, the personnel involved at a scene (including the media), the detection of criminal traces and their reconstruction, and special crime scenes, such as mass disasters and terroristic events. Written by an international trio of authors with decades of crime scene experience, The Science of Crime Scenes is the next generation of crime scene textbooks.



* Offers a science-based approach to crime scene investigation
* Includes in-depth coverage of disasters and mass murder, terror crime scenes, and CBRN (chemical, biological, radioactive and nuclear) – not covered in any other text
* Written by an international trio of authors with decades of crime scene experience
* Instructor website with lecture slides, test bank, outlines, definitions, and activities, and a student companion site with an image collection Foreword Acknowledgments Introduction The science of crime scene investigation The "forensic mindset" From scene to laboratory to court What is a crime scene? Crime scene intelligence : connecting people, places, and things Personnel and procedures Personnel First responder on the scene The investigator in charge The forensic team: officers, scientists and specialists Non-forensic personnel : superiors, officials, and the media General crime scene procedure "Freezing" the scene and the 3R's (recognize, record and recover) The chain of custody Recording the scene: sketching, photography, and video Detection and reconstruction Searching for evidence : recovery Detecting Collection Preserving Submitting evidence to the laboratory Evidence types and enhancement Chemical evidence Biological evidence Impression evidence Other evidence types Crime scene reconstruction An archaeological approach Bloodstain pattern analysis Photogrammetry and 3d reconstruction Special crime scenes Special crime scenes Disaster and mass fatalities Terrorist crime scenes Cbrn crime scenes Underwater and underground crime scenes Subject index. Addresses the science behind the scenes and demonstrates the advanced methods and technologies in depth. This title covers the philosophy of crime scenes as historical events, the personnel involved at a scene, the detection of criminal traces and their reconstruction, and special crime scenes, such as mass disasters and terroristic events.
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