TY - JOUR
T1 - Finding the missing and unknown
T2 - Novel educational approaches to warming up cold cases
AU - Bettels, Karsten
AU - Grimstead, Dave
AU - Allsop, Cheryl
AU - Chaussée, Anna
AU - Bolton-King, Rachel S.
AU - Sturdy Colls, Caroline
AU - Chapman, Brendan
AU - Keatley, David
AU - Tilley, Emma
AU - Turner, Jo
AU - Spence, Samantha
AU - Marquardt, Annette
N1 - Funding Information:
First and foremost, the authors would like to acknowledge the missing and their families to whom this work is dedicated. In addition, the authors wish to thank all those who have participated in the cold case investigations as part of this ongoing international partnership and collaboration. This includes all the students as well as all the professionals who have been instrumental in allowing this initiative to take place, and especially those responsible investigators and public prosecutors in Lower Saxony, Germany for making the digitised files of the cold cases available for our international analysis.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Chartered Society of Forensic Sciences
PY - 2022/11/1
Y1 - 2022/11/1
N2 - In recent years, students in police academies and higher education institutions around the world have worked together to analyse cold cases including long-term missing persons cases in collaboration with investigators and prosecutors. In 2020, three European organisations, the Police Expert Network on Missing Persons (PEN-MP), AMBER Alert Europe and Locate International, succeeded in connecting these educational organisations enabling them to work collectively on cases and conduct cold case analyses (CCA) across international borders. The International Cold Case Analysis Project (ICCAP) learning objectives were to 1) collect the necessary information about the victim, 2) reconstruct the crime, and 3) investigate trace control. In a learning objective-based evaluation using Computer-Assisted Web Interviewing, 76 participating students from the German and International ICCAP teams were asked to complete a pre- and post-review questionnaire to self-assess their personal competence development. Participants reported significant increases in competence in all evaluated areas, thus demonstrating that authentic and relevant collaborations can enrich the learning environment, promote the use of professional skills, and provide significant knowledge exchange opportunities between academia and industry. Drawing on case studies of cold case missing persons' investigations and unidentified found remains, this article shares how university academics, students and community volunteers can work together nationally and internationally to find out what has happened to missing people and how we can more effectively identify the previously unidentified. In so doing, we share the expertise required to progress these cold cases and provide recommendations to support other institutions and organisations in adopting this innovative approach.
AB - In recent years, students in police academies and higher education institutions around the world have worked together to analyse cold cases including long-term missing persons cases in collaboration with investigators and prosecutors. In 2020, three European organisations, the Police Expert Network on Missing Persons (PEN-MP), AMBER Alert Europe and Locate International, succeeded in connecting these educational organisations enabling them to work collectively on cases and conduct cold case analyses (CCA) across international borders. The International Cold Case Analysis Project (ICCAP) learning objectives were to 1) collect the necessary information about the victim, 2) reconstruct the crime, and 3) investigate trace control. In a learning objective-based evaluation using Computer-Assisted Web Interviewing, 76 participating students from the German and International ICCAP teams were asked to complete a pre- and post-review questionnaire to self-assess their personal competence development. Participants reported significant increases in competence in all evaluated areas, thus demonstrating that authentic and relevant collaborations can enrich the learning environment, promote the use of professional skills, and provide significant knowledge exchange opportunities between academia and industry. Drawing on case studies of cold case missing persons' investigations and unidentified found remains, this article shares how university academics, students and community volunteers can work together nationally and internationally to find out what has happened to missing people and how we can more effectively identify the previously unidentified. In so doing, we share the expertise required to progress these cold cases and provide recommendations to support other institutions and organisations in adopting this innovative approach.
KW - Academia-industry partnership
KW - Authentic learning
KW - Cold case
KW - International collaboration
KW - Investigation
KW - Missing persons
KW - Multidisciplinary
KW - Review
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85127687048&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.scijus.2022.03.007
DO - 10.1016/j.scijus.2022.03.007
M3 - Article
C2 - 36400496
AN - SCOPUS:85127687048
VL - 62
SP - 749
EP - 757
JO - Science and Justice - Journal of the Forensic Science Society
JF - Science and Justice - Journal of the Forensic Science Society
SN - 1355-0306
IS - 6
ER -