STS Circle at Harvard
[cid:[email protected]]
Naor Ben-Yehoyada
Harvard, Center for Middle Eastern Studies

on

"I Can Feel the Mafia But I Can't See It": An Anthropology of Forensic Knowledge

Monday, November 10
12:15-2:00 pm
Room 100F, Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street

[cid:[email protected]]

Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to via our 
online<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1HbdY3j1fVcUeE-UqQ7pN5clAxQtaQX7Ux6Y0tRMM9E8/viewform>
 
form<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1HbdY3j1fVcUeE-UqQ7pN5clAxQtaQX7Ux6Y0tRMM9E8/viewform>
 before Thursday morning, November 6.

Abstract:   While anti-mafia investigations are as old as the Sicilian Mafia 
itself, the debate about what the Mafia is and how to fight it has remained 
unresolved. The current shape of Antimafia criminal justice formed since the 
1960s, when two “Mafia Wars” and assassinations of magistrates, politicians, 
and investigators triggered the short-lived civic outrage, a perennial 
parliamentary investigative commission (est. 1963), and periodic legal reforms. 
The successful prosecution of leading mafiosi during those years relied on a 
forensic paradigm that constructed the mafia as a hierarchical and unitary 
criminal organization, according to which “everything is connected” in the 
intersection of politics, economy, and social relations.

The paper follows the trajectory of this forensic paradigm from the 1980s 
Palermo maxi-trial to present-day magistrates’ dilemmas regarding investigative 
conceptions and technologies: how to construct the mafia and prosecute mafiosi 
using justice collaborators, wiretapped conversations, and evidentiary 
narratives. Magistrates’ current efforts have recently reopened the debate 
about what the mafia is. On the one hand, Palermo Antimafia magistrates hold 
that “the Mafia won,” that it survived because of a secret “pact” with the 
country’s highest-ranking officials. On the other hand, historians and legal 
scholars claim that enforcement efforts have dismantled the Mafia’s dominance 
in Sicilian politics, and accuse those who still think that “everything is 
connected” of conspiracy theories. By studying this particular forensic 
paradigm and the legal and political dilemmas it generated for the magistrates, 
I argue that the interaction between the mafia and anti-mafia strategies to 
construe and fight it contributed to the forensic co-production of organized 
crime and political institutions.

Biography:   Naor Ben-Yehoyada (MA, Tel Aviv University, 2005; PhD, Harvard 
University, 2011) is Academy Scholar at the Harvard Academy for International 
and Area Studies, Research Fellow in Social Anthropology at Gonville and Caius 
College, University of Cambridge (currently on intermission), and Associated 
Researcher at the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Istituto per l’Ambiente 
Marino Costiero in Mazara del Vallo, Sicily. He specializes in maritime, 
political, and historical anthropology, specifically the maritime aspect of 
Israeli-Palestinian history and post-WWII region formation processes between 
Sicily and Tunisia.



A complete list of STS Circle at Harvard events can be found on our website:
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
Follow us on Facebook: STS@Harvard<http://www.facebook.com/HarvardSTS>

_______________________________________________
Sci-tech-public mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/sci-tech-public

Reply via email to