CRIMINAL FORENSICS AS A TECHNOLOGY OF RACIAL SURVEILLANCE: BETWEEN FORENSIC EPISTEMOLOGY, NECROPOLITICS AND RACIALIZED ALGORITHMS
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.56238/isevmjv4n3-025Palabras clave:
Criminal Forensics, Racial Surveillance, Algorithms, Forensic Epistemology, Necropolitics, Epistemic JusticeResumen
This article offers a critical analysis of Brazilian forensic science as a technology of racial surveillance, highlighting how forensic practices contribute to the technical-scientific legitimation of institutional violence against Black and marginalized populations. Drawing on an interdisciplinary literature review, the article articulates critical criminology, sociology of science, and decolonial studies to demonstrate that forensic knowledge—far from neutral—is shaped by historical structures of racialization, penal selectivity, and epistemic exclusion. Special attention is given to the role of algorithmic technologies and artificial intelligence in the production of forensic reports and judicial decisions, revealing how such systems, when trained on biased datasets, exacerbate racial inequality under the guise of objectivity. The research underscores the urgency of an antiracist forensic reform, grounded in epistemic justice and in the pluralization of truth regimes regarding death and violence.
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Derechos de autor 2025 Walter de Vasconcelos Rosas Dias

Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial 4.0.