The EXCHANGE project seeks to address the challenges to citizenship, democracy and social control posed by technological systems of surveillance and control of criminality and terrorism. The European Union (EU) has invested in the creation of a pan-European system for the transnational exchange of forensic data between Member States for the purpose of combating cross-border crime, terrorism and illegal migration: the so-called Prüm system, relying on the permanent and automated exchange of information between Member States, namely of DNA profile data, fingerprints, and vehicle registration data. The EXCHANGE project focuses on DNA data insofar as the Prüm Decisions have widened the scope of DNA profiling and databasing as an increasingly important tool for criminal investigation and criminal justice systems. At present, there are 25 operational EU Member States exchanging DNA data.
The exchange of DNA data in the EU aims to strengthen cooperation among Member States in order to fight transnational threats to collective security. While focusing on the role of forensic genetics and technology in the implementation of an ‘area of freedom, security and justice’, the EXCHANGE project investigates the new and old challenges provoked by this scenario to social control, citizenship and democracy in contemporary societies.
The EXCHANGE project adopted a perspective based on science and technology studies (STS) that aims to examine the co-production of science, technology and social order. The project team is also engaged in developing interdisciplinary and ground breaking knowledge, at the intersection of social sciences and forensic genetics. Therefore, one important goal of the EXCHANGE project was to develop and apply innovative theoretical and methodological tools that tackled questions that are relevant to the actors involved in criminal justice cooperation in the EU. Research results might also inform governance and policy-making founded on a respect for human rights, transparency and public trust.