墨西哥的生物康复、暴力和COVID-19流行病

Arely Cruz-Santiago, Ernesto Schwartz-Marin
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在过去十年中,失踪者的母亲们成功地挑战了尸体管理的主权圈地。为了探讨COVID-19对死者的道德责任是如何重新协商的,本文提出了生物休养的概念,将其理解为通过生物材料的恢复对死者进行个性化的法医护理。由于大流行,禁止与尸体直接接触的公共卫生要求中断了生物恢复的逻辑。我们的分析基于十年来与墨西哥失踪者家属合作的经验、墨西哥法医科学系统内的人种学研究以及与在墨西哥城大流行前沿工作的医务人员和法医科学家进行的在线访谈。面对日益增加的病毒传染和死亡风险,本文分析了旨在绕过国家对尸体管理和鉴定的禁令及其垄断的旧技术和新技术。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Biorecuperation, the epidemic of violence and COVID-19 in Mexico
COVID-19 has reinstated the sovereign enclosures of corpse management that mothers of the disappeared had so successfully challenged in the past decade. To explore how moral duties toward the dead are being renegotiated due to COVID-19, this article puts forward the notion of biorecuperation, understood as an individualised form of forensic care for the dead made possible by the recovery of biological material. Public health imperatives that forbid direct contact with corpses due to the pandemic, interrupt the logics of biorecuperation. Our analysis is based on ten years of experience working with families of the disappeared in Mexico, ethnographic research within Mexico’s forensic science system and online interviews conducted with medics and forensic scientists working at the forefront of Mexico City’s pandemic. In the face of increasing risks of viral contagion and death, this article analyses old and new techniques designed to bypass the prohibitions imposed by the state and its monopoly over corpse management and identification.
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