Avans International Interns

Eleven of our Undergraduate Forensic students, including one of our Avans International Interns, presented their research at the British Conference of Undergraduate Research (BCUR) at Bournemouth University on Tuesday 25th and Wednesday 26th April 2017.  The students presented findings from their Independent Research Projects, which included studies into sexual offences, fingerprints, decomposition, osteology, body fluid analysis, archaeological techniques and fibres evidence, either as an oral presentation or a poster presentation. 

 

 

Back Row, L-R: Antony O’Rourke, Lance Malcolm, Jake Baylis Middle Row, L-R: Elli Sarvari, Laura Denton, Dr Laura Walton-Williams, Ting-Ting Chu, Jessica Baugh, Jessica Crossland Front Row L-R: Danielle McBride, Natalie Atkinson, Jessica Gill

They were accompanied by Dr Laura Walton-Williams, who was incredibly impressed by the professionalism and quality of the students research.  “The calibre of research presented at BCUR is incredibly high, and we are delighted that so many of our students had the opportunity to present here. It is a very competitive process, so the fact that so many of our students were accepted to present speaks volumes about the quality of research they have conducted.  I am very proud of all of the students who presented at this event and hope this will provide them with the confidence to further disseminate the findings of their research.” The students would like to thank Staffordshire University who generously funded the students registration, travel and accommodation to this national conference and Tim Harris (Staffordshire University Geography Senior Lecturer and Member of BCUR Organising Committee) for his support and guidance.

Student Ambassador Awards 2017

One of the ways we seek to make our Open Days welcoming is through the help of our Student Ambassadors. There are around 200 of these, and they take turns to guide students and family through Open Days and Applicant Days; they go into Schools and Colleges; deliver workshops at Staffs Uni and answer your questions from their direct experience.

This is only the second year we’ve run the awards.

The event was a collaboration between Paul Donnelly and Laura Knight and Jamie Leese

We had canapes and prosecco before going into one of our most up to date lecture theatres for the presentation. 

 

There were twelve section awards given out for different aspects of the ambassador contribution. Bertha Eke more than demonstrated why she won the prize for Enthusiasm, and as someone who has more than once arrived at events to find a ‘crisis’ in progress, I was tickled by Klaudia Szatkowska’s Make the Best of a Bad Job Award.

Award                                                 Winner

Residential Ambassador Award                Sam Pillow

Post 16 Ambassador Award                     Lucy Beaman & Satty Kaur

Best Newcomer                                     Carly Twigg

Ambassador Enthusiasm Award               Bertha Eke

Open Day Ambassador Award                  Jess Prince

Best Communicator Award                     Marlone Judith

 

 

Making the best of a bad job award           Klaudia Szatkowska

UCAS Exhibitions Ambassador               Lauren Welsh

Great Minds Bus Tour Ambassador           Arpan Bedi

Services to Admissions & Enrolment       Gitana Duka & Julie-Anne Slevin

Social Media Award                               Sam Pillow   

Above and Beyond Award                       Elli Sarvari

 

 

The final award of the evening, to the Ambassador of the year, went to Jess Prince.

Digital Forensics Portfolio Board Quality Standards Project

Claire Gwinnet at presenting to the National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC)   at a  Digital Forensic Network & Learning Event  this week entitled ‘ Digital Forensics and ISO 17025’.

Claire Gwinnet presenting on a a validation study for ISO accreditation.

– this is an all police forces event invitation only event to discuss and share best practice in accreditation in digital forensics.

What happens in the labs when you are away

So it is the Easter break. Time to relax, spend some time with the family, eat chocolate!

For us technical staff the breaks are often as busy as the teaching term! We have large-scale cleaning, disposals, stocktaking, ordering and replenishing just to start. With the third semester for the MSc students on the horizon, there is also solution making for the wet practical labs, setting up and preparation for the criminalistics labs, a deep clean of the crime scene house and some trauma make-up, engineer visits, maintenance of instrumentation and equipment; not forgetting all the normal weekly routine work, whilst still available for support of the MSci, placement students, and our Belgian and Dutch interns. Thank goodness for bank holidays J

FACS Society host the 5th Annual Student-Led Research Conference

This week saw the Forensic and Crime Science Society host their 5th annual Student-Led Undergraduate Research Conference, which was a tremendous success with over 100 students, ERASMUS interns and staff attending from all academic years across the Criminal Justice and Forensic Science Department at Staffordshire University.

Maria Maclennan

 

Our second year undergraduate students organised and ran the conference inviting opening keynote speaker Maria Maclennan to discuss her PhD and expertise as a forensic jeweller and closing keynote Deneen Hernandez presenting on her role as a cryptanalyst with the FBI.

Daphne vG

During the afternoon, five students delivered oral presentations covering research in the following areas:

  • Non-destructive methods of DNA recovery from latent fingermarks;
  • Victim journey after the reporting of a sexual assault;
  • Development of a likelihood ratio approach for ammunition identification;
  • Impact of firing through skin simulant on fired ammunition components;
  • Effects on decomposition after encasing pork in cement.

    Elli S Sexual Assault Reporting

The lunch break made for a vibrant and interesting discussion around 8 student poster presentations, also giving attendees the chance to network and individually meet our invited speakers.

Both Maria and Deneen were very impressed with the organisation of the FACS Society and the professional delivery of all student presenters. Drs Rachel Bolton-King and Laura Walton-Williams, who are the academic support for the conference, were immensely proud of all who were involved and are already looking forward to what next year’s conference may bring! Videos of most of the presentations can be found on the FACS Society Facebook page (https://en-gb.facebook.com/pg/FACSStaffs/videos/?ref=page_internal) #ProudToBeStaffs.

 

This is STEM week so we asked our scientists what they were working on….

Claire Gwinnet, reports that the trace evidence research group is currently working on experiments in transfer and persistence of fibres in a variety of environments, such aimgress waterways and common points of entry to aid in reconstructing events at crime scenes. Very important validation studies are being conducted by Staffordshire university for West Mercia and Warwickshire police for their ISO17020 accreditation – validation studies include effective methods for tape lifting at scenes and 3D footwear impression casting methods.

 Forensic Students Beth and Charlotte are having extra tutorials with Dean Northfields in the techniques of 3D bodymapping. Dean-Northfield-1Body mappingThis techniques incorporates computer CGI with complex pathology reports to create forensic graphics that are suitable for use in UK courts, in particular when explaining traumatic death of individuals.his techniques bring together disciplines across the STEM spectrum incorporMwaF5tGk_400x400ating Post mortem pictures, CGI and technical reporting

 Rachel Bolton-King is undertaking research with firearm expert Paul Olden (Key Forensic Services) to identify manufacturing lines of shotgun cartridges through the forensic examination of fired wadding and shot. The research is supported by National Ballistics Intelligence Service and students from Staffordshire University and Avans University (The Netherlands). Recent research activity involved visiting ammunition manufacturing facilities to further understand and observe manufacturing processes.

Sarah Fieldhouse’s Level 6 Forensics students have been learning about the Bayesian approach to the interpretation and evaluation of evidence.  Students were given a mock crime scenario involving a hit and run case, whereby fibres were recovered from the bonnet of a suspect car that were indistinguishable from fibres taken from the victim’s coat.  Students were required to devise likelihood ratios for the fibres evidence, which were used to assess its probative value.Sarah_Fieldhouse

Research student Iris Dingemanse

Myname is Iris Dingemanse, from Avans University in the Nederlands, presently undertaking my graduation placement, which is my second placement here at Staffordshire University.

 

IMG_7213_Agreed with IrisAfter performing research into footwear polymers in my first project I am currently testing and developing packaging materials for retaining residues of ignitable liquids, such as petrol, used in relation to arson investigation. In the UK nylon-11 polymer bags are mostly used as containers for collecting and storing fire debris prior to chemical analysis to identify the class characteristics of any ignitable liquids that may be present in the fire debris or on suspects’ or victims’ clothing. However, as reported in the literature these bags do have some disadvantages such as certain components may migrate through the polymer membrane, may demonstrate background interferences and can easily be pierced or torn by sharp items. The aim of this research project is to test and develop packaging materials for the purpose of overcoming some of these disadvantages, with the principal aim to eliminate the loss of volatile components by migration through the membrane. I am testing the migration rates of key volatile chemical components in closed systems and using industry standard methods of analysis such as automated thermal desorption-gas chromatography (ATD-GC).

 

Welcome to World Book Day!

I asked our staff to talk about books that had inspired them.

Neil Lamont , Senior Lecturer in Forensic Chemistry wrote: As a youngster I was an avid angler and this was the catalyst for my continued love of the environment. Visiting the library to research my hobby, I found many well-loved books, from the fifties and sixties, on how to become the complete angler. The authors, themselves conservationist showed great insight with regards to the complexity of the environment, with in-depth observations on the feeding habits of the fish and the life cycles of the insects on which they feed. Their study of the aquatic environment ultimately influenced my choice of Degree and even the subject of my PhD.

Keith Puttick, Associate Professor of Law wrote: 51YYZKvOQrL._SX373_BO1,204,203,200_


Erin Pizzey Scream Quietly or the Neighbours Will Hear (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1974). Inspirational and transformative, Pizzey’s analysis was also matched by action – Chiswick Womens Aid and Refuge http://www.refuge.org.uk  It is reading for the DV section of the Social Welfare Law and Practice Level 6 option (and L7 module). Incredible then as now, it spawned a vast literature on domestic abuse, social housing, and liberation politics. Compare its messages with contemporary priorities. Look at the Womens Aid site https://www.womensaid.org.uk/ Consider, too, today’s challenges. Cuts to services, refuges, and helplines. Forward into the past!

 

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Aidan Flynn, who works on Constitutional Law remembers reading Peter Hennessy’s ‘The Hidden Wiring: Unearthing the British Constitution’ (1995). “It has a name that captures the mystique of an uncodified Constitution.  In 2010, PM Gordon Brown initiated work that led to the Cabinet Manual, published in 2011.  Hennessy co-authored a report:  ‘The Cabinet Manual and the Working of the British Constitution: The Hidden Wiring Emerges.’  The report describes the manual as “the broadest description of the constitutional landscape to be found in any single official document yet published.  But it is not the expression of a fully codified UK constitution.”  Full codification may come before the 21st century is out.”

for Matt Sadler, who works on Business and Commercial Law, it was when his mother gave him John Rawls’s book A Theory of Justice. 41Yigkd9kfL._SX325_BO1,204,203,200_

 “When my mother was completing her BA in Crime, Deviance & Society as a mature student in 2001 at Staffordshire University, she handed me a book and said ‘you’d enjoy this!’.I eventually got around to reading it and was intrigued by the notion that justice ought to be blind and that a ‘veil of ignorance’. Rawls suggests that ‘we must nullify the effects of specific contingencies which put men at odds and tempt them to exploit social and natural circumstances to their own advantage’. In other words justice can only be metered out when the system adopts this filtering of facts so that, as Rawls suggest, the ‘veil of ignorance’ precludes discussions of a person’s place in society, his fortune including natural assets and abilities, his intelligence and strength etc.It was this socio-legal position that first caught my attention and began to foster an interest in fairness, justness and equality in the eyes of the law and that in order for jurisprudent application of legal theory in the real world to be robust and adopt the ‘justice is blind’ position there needs to be a protection against bias and unfair categorization of those who come under the legal system’s scrutiny.It was at this moment that the seeds were planted and I have spent the last 8 years since beginning my legal education entrenching this philosophy within my own research and teaching.

Laura Walton Williams from Forensic Science writes: I have two, the non-fictional book, ‘Maggots, Murder and Men’ was written by Zakaria Erzinçlioglu who was 9k=a forensic entomologist.  I read this book before I started studying Forensics, and it was fascinating to find out how biological evidence could be used to aid criminal investigations. Fiction wise, the Sherlock Holmes books by Arthur Conan Doyle captured my imagination and I still enjoy reading these to this day. The concept of deductive reasoning based on observations is very well depicted in these stories.

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A great frustration in my previous career as a police officer was the prevalence of unsubstantiated assertions, cavalier approaches to the truth and an emphasis on style over substance. Thinking that these indicated very low intelligence or a deliberate intention to deceive I often sank into despair. Reading Princeton Professor Harry Frankfurt’s essay called “On Bullshit” completely changed my outlook. It was published as a book in 2005 and became a NY Times #1 best seller. He traces the etymology, concepts and the social functions of bullshit. Importantly he explains the difference between lying and bullshit. A hugely influential book, it gives great insight into the communications of politicians, public officials and corporate leaders. As a taster, see Prof Frankfurt’s article in Time magazine in which he analyses Donald Trump’s communications using his theory. – David Simmonds

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 Louis Martin wrote: “I found that my experience of teaching in the Law Department led me to a very important book. I was captivated by Rupert Haigh’s Legal English (fourth edition). I think all law students should have a Haigh close to hand during their studies. Haigh explains the importance of learning the legal terms and specialised language of law. Legal English is a very distinct and discrete branch of English and can be very challenging for the modern law student.  Many students need to be familiar with complex legal terms and Haigh really helps with his hints and tips.”

9k=“A life time ago when I was a law student I found a copy of Graveson’s and Crane’s A Century of Family Law in a second hand book shop. It was published in 1957 and covered the period 1857 to 1957. While it had little bearing on my then studies, it was a window into the past that began my fascination with the development of family law and how the law and social conventions influence each other. The most startling revelation was that less than ten percent of the contents covered the law relating to children in 1957, the majority of the contents covered the breakdown of relationships and financial obligation’s between family members. Today that statistic seems absurd as there is far more law relating to children than to adults and their relationships. Graveson and Crane was a seminal work in its time and now highlights how family law has changed, fundamentally for the better recognising the needs and rights of the most vulnerable members of society whose voices were barley heard in 1957”.- Sue Jenkinson

World Book Day – somewhat late! from Forensics team member Julian Partridge.IMG_1402_Treasure Island Front Cover

When siting back and reflecting upon the books that inspired me as a child I suddenly remembered how bare the bookshelves actually were in my parent’s home and how few books I actually possessed at the time, thankfully this is now rectified. However, I did have my father’s illustrated copy of “Treasure Island” by Robert Louis Stevenson published in the 1950s.IMG_1404_Billy Bones and Black Dog at the Admiral Ben Bow

A story of adventure, loyalty, daring, betrayal and murder- strangely all of which have had some part to play in my career as a forensic scientist and ex-volunteer serviceman, I just haven’t found the treasure yet!

Geography Fieldwork at Middleport Pottery

Although Geography is in the School of Arts and Creative Industries, the two schools have people and research in common.

On a cold February day last week a group of Geography students visited the Middleport regeneration area near to Burslem, as part of their Urban Worlds module.

 

 

MiddleportPotteryentranceIn the heyday of the pottery industry this was a thriving area of factories, mills and a close-knit residential community. Economic decline hit this area very hard, the result was neglect and dereliction.

SteeliteModernFactory

At the turn of the century (2000) Middleport became the focus for a redevelopment project to breathe new life into the area, however with the demise of the Renew initiative in 2011 the Prince’s Regeneration Trust saved the Middleport Pottery.

 

There is still much work to be done, but the students were able to see the transformation that has taken place in the complete refurbishment of the terraced houses in Port Street including the provision of gardens; Middleport Visitors Centre and learn from a local volunteer about the Burleigh Pottery, archive and studio provision for artists and ceramicists as well as the modern face of the pottery industry in Steelite nearby. http://www.middleportpottery.org

 

Port Street BEFORE & AFTER (front and back)

 

BEFOREPortSt AFTERPortStbackgardens PortStRefurb1