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Is
Forensic Computing a Profession?
Revisiting an Old Debate in a New Field
Bernd Carsten Stahl
De Montfort University
Leicester, UK
bstahl@dmu.ac.uk
ABSTRACT
Forensic Computing is a new and
quickly developing field. It is in the process of becoming an
academic discipline or sub-discipline with all the features from
full undergraduate and postgraduate course provision to
conferences and journals. An important question in this process
of turning into an established discipline is whether it will
coincide with the recognition of the graduates as professionals.
This paper hopes to stimulate the debate as to whether forensic
computing is or should be a discipline. In order to approach
this question, the paper will discuss the concept of forensic
computing including the most salient topics of interest and the
problems it has to contend with. This will lead to a discussion
of the notion of professions and professionals, which will be
expanded with a view to the debate on computing as a profession.
Based on these considerations the paper will conclude by asking
whether there is merit in promoting the debate on the status of
forensic computing as a profession above and beyond the
arguments already rehearsed for computing in general.
Keywords: forensic
computing, profession, professional, ethics
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