Dr. William Belcher is a forensic anthropologist and archaeologist in the School of Global Integrative Studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL). He manages the UNL Forensic Anthropology Research Laboratory as well as the undergraduate and graduate programs in forensic anthropology. Dr. Belcher consults and trains in identification efforts with local law enforcement within the State of Nebraska and beyond. Prior to coming to UNL in 2019, he retired as the deputy laboratory director of the US Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency’s Central Identification Laboratory where he conducted forensic investigation, recovery, and identification efforts to support the US mission of missing-in-action identification and repatriation to family members. His research has been featured in numerous academic conferences in the U.S. and South Asia and in several publications.
Dr. Belcher’s Fulbright-Nehru project’s main goal is to provide a framework for building up the forensic anthropological/archaeological capacity of the National Forensic Sciences University in Gujarat. This involves three academic courses – in human osteology, forensic anthropology, and a field course in forensic archaeology – and is set to culminate in a field exercise of approximately five weeks in the north-eastern region of India associated with a U.S. World War II-era aircraft incident. Currently, there is no curriculum in the Republic of India in terms of archaeological recovery and excavation associated with crime scene investigation.