Criteria for new specialties to be included on the
register
Historically, many of the first specialties that were included on
the CRFP register were those that were practised in the mainstream
forensic laboratories and in the volume areas of police work.
Forensic practice, however, encompasses many other disciplines.
New forensic disciplines are emerging as technology advances,
job descriptions and functions develop and as the need for expert
evidence encroaches into areas not always associated with the
judicial system and its requirements. As a result, there is a need
to enable those in these developing and changing forensic arenas to
become registered with CRFP.
If you are working in such an area and would like to know what
CRFP expects of those who wish to add their specialty to the
register, please
click here.
It is not only important that new specialties are given the
opportunity to join the register, it is also vital that the
availability of the specialty is made widely known to others
working in that specialty.
Click here for
some ideas as to how new specialties can be brought to the
attention of others.