Forensic Reality? CSI, Media, and Public Technoscience 8 Oct 09 (Thursday) at 4pm, Spurlock Museum
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
| Oct ’09 |
| 8 |
| 4:00 pm |
On Thursday, 8 October 2009 at 4pm, Simon A. Cole of UC Irvine will present a talk on Forensic Reality? CSI, Media, and Public Technoscience
as part of the CAS Technoscience series:
In recent years, the application of technoscience to the investigation of crime, generally known as “forensic science,” has become increasingly significant. This development has been celebrated by a variety of media sources, most notably the fictionalized technoscience-driven crime drama, CSI. The popularity of forensics-oriented media has promoted concerns about possible unintended consequences, in which the general public that composes the jury pool supposedly entertains a fantasized notion of the power of forensic technoscience. This presentation explores the supposed “CSI effect” and asks what is the nature of this effect, what is the evidence that it is in fact occurring, and what assumptions about technoscience and law are embedded in popular anxieties about the CSI effect?
The talk is cosponsore by the Center for Advanced Study, College of Engineering, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of History, and Program in Science and Technology Studies. All CAS events are free and open to the public.

