Shadows of doubt: the uneasy incorporation of identification science into legal determination of paternity in Brazil

Sombras da dúvida: a difícil incorporação da ciência de identificação na determinação legal da paternidade no Brasil

Sombras de duda: la ardua incorporación de las pruebas científicas de identificación en la determinación legal de la paternidad en Brasil

Sueann Caulfield Alexandra Minna Stern About the authors

Abstracts

The arrival of DNA paternity testing in the 1980s was met with great enthusiasm in the Brazilian courts. Yet, over the past two decades, Brazilian legal doctrine and jurisprudence have increasingly rejected DNA proof as the sine qua non for paternity cases. Instead, DNA paternity testing has generated mountains of litigation, as biological proof has been challenged by the argument that paternity is primarily “socio-affective”. Leading family law specialists describe this new conception of paternity as an outcome of the “revolutionary” provisions of the 1988 Constitution, which recognizes the “pluralism” of family forms in modern society and guarantees equal family rights for all children. Without denying the significance of the constitution’s dignitary framework, we show that new legal understandings of paternity represent less a paradigm shift than a continuation of longstanding historical tensions between biological and socio-cultural understandings of family and identity. In this article, we explore the development of biological and eventually genetic typing in Brazil, both of which had ties to the fields of criminology and race science. Our review suggests that techniques of biological identification, no matter how sophisticated or precise, were ineffective means for establishing identity, whether of individual personhood, as in the case of paternity, or national make-up. Instead, they became incorporated as supplemental methods into complex legal, social, and cultural decision-making around families.

Paternity; Forensic Genetics; Forensic Medicine


O surgimento dos testes de DNA para determinação de paternidade, nos anos 1980, foi recebida com grande entusiasmo nos tribunais brasileiros. No entanto, ao longo das últimas duas décadas, a doutrina jurídica e a jurisprudência brasileiras têm rejeitado cada vez mais a prova de DNA como condição sine qua non para os casos de paternidade. Testes de paternidade de DNA geraram inúmeros litígios que contestaram a prova biológica com o argumento de que a paternidade é principalmente “socioafetiva”. Os principais especialistas em direito de família descrevem essa nova concepção de paternidade como resultado das disposições “revolucionárias” da Constituição Federal de 1988, que reconhece a “pluralidade” das formas familiares na sociedade moderna e garante direitos iguais para todas as crianças. Sem negar a importância de novos princípios constitucionais, mostramos que os novos conceitos jurídicos da paternidade representam menos uma mudança de paradigma do que a continuação de antigas tensões históricas entre concepções biológicas e socioculturais da família e da identidade. Neste artigo, exploramos o desenvolvimento da tipologia biológica e, posteriormente, genética no Brasil, ambas ligadas aos campos da criminologia e da ciência racial. Nossa análise sugere que as técnicas de identificação biológica, por mais sofisticadas ou precisas que fossem, eram meios ineficazes para estabelecer a identidade, seja da personalidade individual, como no caso da paternidade, ou da composição nacional. Em vez disso, elas foram incorporadas como métodos suplementares para as decisões legais, sociais e culturais complexas em torno das famílias.

Paternidade; Genética Forense; Medicina Legal


La inclusión de las pruebas de ADN para la determinación de la paternidad en los años ochenta fue recibida con gran entusiasmo en los tribunales brasileños. A pesar de ello hoy en día, tras haber trascurrido dos décadas, la doctrina legal y la jurisprudencia brasileña han rechazado cada vez más las pruebas de ADN como pruebas determinantes de los casos de paternidad. Es más, las pruebas de ADN para la paternidad han generado muchísimos litigios, puesto que las pruebas biológicas han sido rebatidas por argumentos basados en que la paternidad es primordialmente una cuestión “socio-afectiva”. Los letrados especialistas en familia consideran esta nueva concepción de la paternidad como una revolución de la Constitución de 1988, la cual reconoce la existencia del pluralismo de familias y equipara los derechos de todos los niños. Sin menoscabar la interpretación del marco constitucional indicado, entendemos que las nuevas interpretaciones jurídicas de paternidad representan, cuanto menos, un cambio generado por las continuas tensiones entre las interpretaciones biológicas y socioculturales de los conceptos de familia y de identidad. En este artículo, analizamos el desarrollo de esta cuestión, desde el punto de vista biológico y genético en Brasil, los cuales se relacionan con los campos de criminología y los estudios raciales. Nuestro análisis sugiere que las técnicas de identificación biológicas, sin importar lo precisas y sofisticadas que sean, son ineficientes en el sentido de establecer una identidad, sea individual como persona, como en el caso de la paternidad, o sea colectiva, como en el seno de una nación. En su lugar, han sido incorporados como métodos complementarios, en el ámbito de toma de decisiones legal, social y cultural, sobre los estudios acerca de las familias.

Paternidad; Genética Forense; Medicina Legal


Introduction

Brazil has a long history of the utilization of genetic research and tests in the fields of population genetics and in clinical and forensic medicine. It is not surprising that it was the first Latin American nation to develop the capacity for DNA paternity testing in the 1980s. In the early 1990s, both the scientific community and popular media created the expectation that DNA testing would easily edge out other methods of paternity determination. For some, this heralded a social transformation that would make insecurities about fatherhood - which Machado de Assis famously depicted as a central feature of Brazilian culture in his 1899 novel, Dom Casmurro - a relic of the patriarchal past 11. Pena SD. A revolução dos testes de DNA. Ciênc Hoje 2010; 9 jul.. Yet around the world, studies have shown that the uptake of genetic technologies has been messy. Examples include popular and clinical uses of ancestry tests or tests for genes associated with breast and ovarian cancer. Although heredity increasingly has been understood as playing an important role in human identity and health, “geneticization” - or the ascendency of genetic explanations - has not been clear-cut. Instead, genomics and genetic technologies become caught up in dynamic social processes that cannot escape history, culture and emotion 22. Nelson A. The social life of DNA: reparations and reconciliation after the genome. Boston: Beacon Press; 2016.,33. Wade P, Santos RV, Restrepo E, Lopez Beltran C. Mestizo genomics: race mixture, nation, and science in Latin America. Durham: Duke University Press; 2014.. This seems to be particularly true regarding DNA paternity testing.

Across Latin America, advances in genetic identification have played a prominent role in human rights cases, including the Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo’s search for biological grandchildren following the dictatorship in Argentina (1976-1983), the forensic identification of victims of state and paramilitary violence in Guatemala, Colombia, and Brazil, and, in the 1990s, the identification of Brazilian children whose parents were committed forcibly to leper’s colonies from the 1940s to the 1980s 44. Penchaszadeh V, editor. Genética y derechos humanos: encuentros y desencuentros. Buenos Aires: Paidós; 2012.. The implicit relationship between DNA testing and human rights also emerged in international law in 1989, when the United Nations Convention of the Rights of the Child, influenced by the Argentinean Abuelas, included the child’s right to know his or her parents (Art. 7) and to preserve his or her identity (Art. 8). Given these precedents, it is not surprising that the arrival of DNA paternity testing initially generated tremendous enthusiasm in the Brazilian scientific community, popular culture, and courts. Yet although the explosion of this testing in the 1990s provided good business for medical laboratories and lowbrow television entertainment, it did not resolve long-standing moral and legal debates over the meaning and responsibilities of paternity. Instead, reliance on DNA testing has generated mountains of litigation, as biological proof was challenged by the argument that paternity is primarily “socio-affective”.

DNA paternity testing has provoked similar responses elsewhere in Latin America and around the world 55. Milanich N. Certain mothers, uncertain fathers: placing reproductive technologies in historical perspective. In: Michel S, Ergas Y, editors. Bodies and borders: negotiating motherhood in the 21st century. New York: Columbia University Press; in press.,66. Browne-Barbour V. "Mama's baby, papa's maybe": disestablishment of paternity. Akron Law Rev 2015; 48:264-313.,77. Fuchs RG. Contested paternity: constructing families in modern France. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press; 2008.. We demonstrate, however, that the intersecting histories of family law, identity science, and population genetics contributed to the particular resonance of these debates in Brazil, where legal doctrine in support of “socio-affective paternity” and children’s rights is especially strong. Brazil’s leading family law specialists see the law’s embrace of socio-affective paternity as emblematic of a paradigm shift underway since the 1980s, which, in fits and starts, brought radically new conceptions of citizenship and dissolved the patriarchal underpinnings of family law. Evoking the human rights framework that emerged as an antidote to authoritarianism across Latin America, they have described new conceptions of paternity as an outcome of the “revolutionary” provisions of Brazil’s 1988 Federal Constitution, which recognizes “pluralistic” family forms and guarantees equal family rights as essential to human dignity 88. Fachin LE. Da paternidade: relação biológica e afetiva. Belo Horizonte: Del Rey; 1996.,99. Welter BP. Igualdade entre as filiações biológica e socioafetiva. São Paulo: Editora Revista dos Tribunais; 2003.,1010. Dias MB. Investigando a parentalidade. Revista CEJ 2004; 8:64-8.,1111. Lôbo PLN. O exame de DNA e o princípio da dignidade da pessoa humana. Revista Brasileira de Direito de Família 1999; 1:67-78.,1212. Lôbo PLN. Direito ao estado de filiação e direito à origem genética: uma distinção necessária. Revista CEJ 2004; 8:47-56.. The Superior Court of Justice (STJ, the highest federal court of appeal) and Supreme Court (STF) have largely adopted these interpretations, although they have not always been consistently implemented at lower instances of law and public policy 1313. Caulfield S. The right to a father's name: a historical perspective on state efforts to combat the stigma of illegitimate birth in Brazil. Law and History Review 2012; 30:1-36.,1414. Fonseca C. Parentesco, tecnologia e lei na era do DNA. Rio de Janeiro: EDUERJ; 2014..

Without diminishing the significance of the constitution’s dignitary framework, we show that responses to the advent of DNA paternity testing also represent a continuation of longstanding tensions between biological and socio-cultural understandings of identity and family. These tensions surfaced both in the realm of family law and among international teams of biologists and geneticists who saw Brazil as an ideal laboratory for observation of racial mixture.

Illegitimacy and paternal recognition in Brazilian history

Concern with verification of paternity has deep roots in Brazilian law. During the colonial period (1500-1822), illegitimacy rates were notoriously high, particularly among the enslaved and free poor population, while Catholic marriage and legitimate birth were critical marks of honor for the white elite. Yet illegitimate children were not uniformly bereft of family honor or access to patrimony. Regardless of the child’s birth status, both parents were required to provide nurturance and education, and for those who could afford it, a royal dispensation could permit a child’s “legitimization”. Even without such dispensation, a father’s recognition of paternity could significantly reduce social stigma, and if a child was of “natural” birth - that is, not adulterous, incestuous, or sacrilegious - parental recognition gave the child the same hereditary rights as legitimate children. A child could sue for recognition, and while maternal recognition required no documentation and was seldom disputed, investigations of paternity were commonly carried out during settlement of a deceased father’s estate, as is true today. Evidence generally consisted of witness testimony confirming that the alleged father had behaved publicly as such, particularly by giving the child his surname and affection and providing for the child’s care and education. The law excluded slaves, but many masters freed and then recognized the children they fathered with slave women 1515. Lewin L. Surprise heirs: illegitimacy, patrimonial rights, and legal nationalism in Luso-Brazilian inheritance, 1750-1821. v. 1. Stanford: Stanford University Press; 2003..

After political independence in 1822, liberal reforms expanded access to the justice system, making it easier for the rapidly growing population of freed and free people of color to sue for paternal recognition. Many liberals also called for the expansion of illegitimate children’s rights. Their arguments were defeated by a series of laws that first reiterated colonial restrictions, then, in 1847, rescinded natural children’s right to demand paternal recognition in court. This radical change was consistent with a trend throughout post-independence Latin America, due in part to the strong influence of the 1804 Napoleonic Code 55. Milanich N. Certain mothers, uncertain fathers: placing reproductive technologies in historical perspective. In: Michel S, Ergas Y, editors. Bodies and borders: negotiating motherhood in the 21st century. New York: Columbia University Press; in press.,1616. Lewin L. Surprise heirs: illegitimacy, inheritance rights, and public power in the formation of imperial Brazil. v. 2. Stanford: Stanford University Press; 2003.,1717. Milanich N. To make all children equal is a change in the power structures of society: the politics of family law in twentieth century Chile and Latin America. Law and History Review 2015; 33:767-802.. Yet whereas French revolutionaries had framed their arguments against paternity suits around enhancing individual men’s freedom, the Brazilian debate took place in the context of regional unrest and slave revolts, and arguments that traditional family honor required protection from individual men’s folly and disreputable outsiders carried heavy racial overtones 77. Fuchs RG. Contested paternity: constructing families in modern France. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press; 2008.,1616. Lewin L. Surprise heirs: illegitimacy, inheritance rights, and public power in the formation of imperial Brazil. v. 2. Stanford: Stanford University Press; 2003..

The debate over the rights of illegitimate children erupted again at the start of the first republic (1890-1930), reaching its height during the lengthy legislative review that preceded the approval of Brazil’s first Civil Code in 1916. This time, liberals held sway, and the code restored natural children’s right to sue for paternal recognition if, during the time of conception, the father had sexual relations, abducted, or “lived in concubinage” with the mother (Art. 363) 1818. Brasil. Lei nº 3.071, de 1º de janeiro de 1916. Código Civil dos Estados Unidos do Brasil. Diário Oficial da União 1916; 5 jan.. Citing precedents in the modern laws of “civilized nations”, liberal jurists and legislators lobbied to include “possession of status of filiation” as an additional basis for paternity investigation 1919. Brasil. Código Civil brasileiro: trabalhos relativos á sua elaboração. v. 1. Rio de Janeiro: Imprensa Nacional; 1917.,2020. Soares de Faria S. Investigação da paternidade illegitima. São Paulo: Saraiva; 1926.,2121. Souza A. Posição juridica dos filhos naturais em face do nosso direito. São Paulo: Hennies Irmãos; 1916.. This Roman Law concept was intended to extend rights to children raised jointly by unmarried parents, which its supporters recognized was a longstanding norm in Brazilian law and popular culture. Conservative legislators, however, struck “possession of status” from the final draft of the code. They also defeated liberal attempts to permit parental recognition of adulterous and incestuous children (such children could still demand child support) (Art. 358 and 405) 1818. Brasil. Lei nº 3.071, de 1º de janeiro de 1916. Código Civil dos Estados Unidos do Brasil. Diário Oficial da União 1916; 5 jan.,2020. Soares de Faria S. Investigação da paternidade illegitima. São Paulo: Saraiva; 1926.. Nonetheless, Brazilian liberals boasted that the code’s provisions regarding illegitimate children were among the world’s most liberal 2222. Ferreira AA. Determinação médico-legal da paternidade (legislação, doutrina e perícia). São Paulo: Companhia Melhoramentos de São Paulo; 1939.,2323. Azevedo N. Da prova na investigação da paternidade. São Paulo: Empresa Gráfica da Revista dos Tribunais; 1928.. The French law that reintroduced paternity investigations in 1912, for instance, was much more restrictive, as were similar Portuguese and Spanish laws of 1867 and 1889, respectively 77. Fuchs RG. Contested paternity: constructing families in modern France. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press; 2008.,2121. Souza A. Posição juridica dos filhos naturais em face do nosso direito. São Paulo: Hennies Irmãos; 1916..

Once the Civil Code was implemented, paternity investigations quickly became one of the most common types of suits heard in the family courts. Jurists debated how to define “sexual relations” and “concubinage”, but agreed that the mother’s reputation as “honest”, that is, modest and respectable, was indispensable 2424. Zicarelli Filho F. Investigação da paternidade natural. Curitiba: Guaíra; 1941.. Surprisingly however, given the narrow wording of the law, evidence of concubinage or sexual relations at the time of conception was not usually the sole deciding issue. Instead, by the 1930s, jurists largely agreed that “possession of status” was not only admissible, but among the most valuable evidence of paternity 2424. Zicarelli Filho F. Investigação da paternidade natural. Curitiba: Guaíra; 1941.,2525. Góes Filho JF. A Investigação da paternidade illegitima no codigo civil brasileiro [Associate Professorship Dissertation]. Salvador: Faculdade de Direito da Bahia; 1930.. In subsequent decades, judges frequently decided in favor of children whose father had provided a name, financial support, education, or affection, particularly if this were public knowledge. Although these elements were understood as evidence of a biological relationship, in practice, judgments reinforced a social and emotional conception of fatherhood 1313. Caulfield S. The right to a father's name: a historical perspective on state efforts to combat the stigma of illegitimate birth in Brazil. Law and History Review 2012; 30:1-36.,2424. Zicarelli Filho F. Investigação da paternidade natural. Curitiba: Guaíra; 1941..

From race science to biotypology

Jurisprudence also grappled with the validity of forensic evidence in paternity cases from the 1920s-1950s, as identification sciences wedded to theories of heredity were taking root, first through the development of race science in legal medicine, and eventually through the loosely organized field of biotypology. Nina Rodrigues (1862-1906), chair of Legal Medicine at the Medical Faculty in Bahia at the turn of the century, is widely credited with transforming Brazilian legal medicine into an interdisciplinary applied science focused on identifying the specific propensities and anomalies of different “types” within Brazil’s multiracial population. Inspired by Cesare Lombroso’s positivist school of criminal anthropology, Rodrigues introduced phrenology and anthropometry as well as evaluation of psychological and cognitive development, which led him to racist conclusions regarding the hereditary degeneracy and general inferiority of his subjects. The field of legal medicine was thus “nationalized” through the introduction of race science 2626. Corrêa M. As ilusões da liberdade: a escola Nina Rodrigues e a antropologia no Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2013..

Ironically, given the centrality of race in the development of identification science, Rodrigues’ disciples found that in practice, determining paternity through comparison of “racial” traits was particularly challenging in Brazil due to its level of racial complexity 2727. Peixoto A. Novos rumos da medicina legal. Rio de Janiero: Companhia Nacional; 1938.,2828. Silva EL. Manual de medicina legal. 3ª Ed. São Paulo: Sugestões Literárias; 1964.. More than Rodrigues’ racism, it was his commitment to local empirical research, and its direct application to Brazilian law and society, that inspired his students, many of whom continued his struggle to institutionalize legal medicine over the first half of the twentieth century 2626. Corrêa M. As ilusões da liberdade: a escola Nina Rodrigues e a antropologia no Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Fiocruz; 2013.. This interest in applied research was evident among Brazilian biotypologists, who emerged in the 1930s principally in anthropology and medicine, and were disenchanted if not hostile to scientific proclamations about the supposed biological degeneration of mixed-race societies 2929. Vimieiro Gomes AC. The emergence of biotypology in Brazilian medicine: the Italian model, textbooks, and discipline building, 1930-1940. In: Simões A, Diogo MP, Gavroglu K, editors. History of European universities, 19th and 20th centuries: challenges and transformations. New York: Springer; 2015. p. 361-80.. Biotypology was a dimension of the Lamarckian variant of eugenics popular in Latin America and “Latin” European countries such as Italy, Spain, and France. It thrived in countries that tended to reject the hard-line racist Mendelian eugenics found in the United States and Germany, even as its adherents sought to map human differences 3030. Stern AM. From mestizophilia to biotypology: racialization and science in Mexico, 1920-1960. In: MacPherson AS, Appelbaum NP, Rosemblatt KA, editors. Race and nation in modern Latin America. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 2003. p. 187-209.. Biotypology was central to the anthropological search to identify the quintessential Brazilian “normotype” or normal man, the subject of dozens of specialized publications, and the field secured a solid foothold in Rio de Janeiro’s School of Medicine 2929. Vimieiro Gomes AC. The emergence of biotypology in Brazilian medicine: the Italian model, textbooks, and discipline building, 1930-1940. In: Simões A, Diogo MP, Gavroglu K, editors. History of European universities, 19th and 20th centuries: challenges and transformations. New York: Springer; 2015. p. 361-80..

Biotypology facilitated the entry of ABO blood typing to Brazil. Kurt Landsteiner, an immunologist, elaborated this system in Germany in the early twentieth century. In 1901 he discovered that different types of blood would agglutinate when mixed together, and based on those clumping patterns, divided blood types into A, B, O, and AB. This led to advances in transfusion medicine and a “proliferation of studies on the blood-group frequencies of different racial and national populations” around the world 3131. Bangham J. Blood groups and human groups: collecting and calibrating genetic data after World War Two. Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci 2014; 47 Part A:74-86. (p. 75). Blood typing did not simply reveal racial and ethnic differences, it also constructed social and legal categories. This was most evident in Nazi Germany, where blood typing tests to exclude paternity were used to determine “racial purity” 3232. Mouton M. From nurturing the nation to purifying the volk: Weimar and Nazi family policy, 1918-1945. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2007.. Elsewhere, these tests were used haphazardly in legal disputes, as they were integrated into the battery of so-called classical genetic markers that included enzyme and protein testing. Fitfully these techniques displaced morphologically based analyses such as anthropometry and phrenology, favored by Rodrigues, and the photographic composites used by some legal experts 3333. Santos RV, Kent M, Gaspar Neto VV. From degeneration to meeting point: historical views on race, mixture, and biological diversity of the Brazilian population. In: Wade P, López Beltrán C, Restrepo E, Santos RV, editors. Mestizo genomics: race mixture, nation, and science in Latin America. Durham: Duke University Press; 2014. p. 33-54..

The first blood test to verify paternity in all of the Americas was performed in 1927 at the Oscar Freire Institute of Legal Medicine in São Paulo, Brazil, one of the nation’s premier forensic laboratories and research centers 3434. Ferreira AA. Investigação médico-legal da paternidade. Revista Médica 1953; 37:1-25. Reprinted 2006; 4:142-56.. The Institute’s forensic team, led by Flamínio Fávero, conducted ABO blood type analysis to exonerate a well-to-do fellow physician accused of fathering the child of his former domestic servant 3535. Sociedade de Medicina Legal e Criminologia. Correio Paulistano 1927; 9 sep.,3636. Finamori SD. Os sentidos da paternidade: dos "pais desconhecidos" ao exame de DNA [Doctoral Dissertation]. Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2012.. Their report and subsequent publications on blood type and paternity investigations circulated widely, contributing to the evolving forensic literature on individual identification as well as to the development of biological methods for studying Brazil’s racial and ethnic types. Nevertheless, the nation’s top experts warned that although combined observations of various heritable traits might serve as supplemental evidence, none could confirm a genetic relationship, and they insisted that forensic reports consider physical evidence alongside contextual information gathered by interviewing the alleged father and child 2424. Zicarelli Filho F. Investigação da paternidade natural. Curitiba: Guaíra; 1941.,2525. Góes Filho JF. A Investigação da paternidade illegitima no codigo civil brasileiro [Associate Professorship Dissertation]. Salvador: Faculdade de Direito da Bahia; 1930.. Against their admonitions, countless private examiners, police legal-medical services, and even some experts at elite institutes commonly offered medical assessments of the “degree of probability” of paternity from the late 1930s to the 1950s, using techniques such as superimposition of photographs of alleged parents and offspring to measure facial structures; cranial or dental formation; sensitivity to the taste of phenylthiourea; eyelash length; earlobe attachment; and fingerprinting. Some judges and even appeals courts ruled on the basis of the medical examination, although this contradicted dominant legal doctrine. Sabrina Finamori describes several paternity cases that contained medical examinations of this sort in the 1930s, although none of them were decided primarily on the physical evidence 3636. Finamori SD. Os sentidos da paternidade: dos "pais desconhecidos" ao exame de DNA [Doctoral Dissertation]. Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2012.. In the juridical literature, specialists routinely criticized exams performed by private physicians and the reliance on unproven anthropometric methods, which some characterized as completely worthless 3434. Ferreira AA. Investigação médico-legal da paternidade. Revista Médica 1953; 37:1-25. Reprinted 2006; 4:142-56.,3636. Finamori SD. Os sentidos da paternidade: dos "pais desconhecidos" ao exame de DNA [Doctoral Dissertation]. Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2012.,3737. Lins e Silva A. Estudos de medicina legal. Rio de Janeiro: A. Coelho Branco; 1938.,3838. Almeida Júnior AF. As provas genéticas da filiação. São Paulo: Revista dos Tribunais; 1941.,3939. Fida O, Albuquerque JBT. Investigação de paternidade: teoria, formulários, jurisprudência, legislação. 4ª Ed. Campinas: Julex Livros; 1987.,4040. Amar AM. Revisão da experiência de 23 anos em investigações de paternidade e maternidade. Arquivos da Polícia Civil de São Paulo 1984; 42:67-76.. Nonetheless, well into the 1980s, legal-medical examiners still completed standardized forms that required various morphological observations, followed by the blood test results 3939. Fida O, Albuquerque JBT. Investigação de paternidade: teoria, formulários, jurisprudência, legislação. 4ª Ed. Campinas: Julex Livros; 1987..

Despite medical examiners’ enthusiasm about the potential of blood typing for verification of paternity in the 1930s, very few tests were performed in Brazilian legal-medical labs in the first half of the twentieth century. In his 1941 dissertation, Antônio Almeida Júnior counted only 73 in all of Brazil - 19 at the Oscar Freire Institute and 54 in the state of Pernambuco, in addition to various exams performed in Rio de Janeiro. Only two of the 54 Pernambucan tests were conclusive, excluding paternity; Almeida did not report on the outcome of the others 3636. Finamori SD. Os sentidos da paternidade: dos "pais desconhecidos" ao exame de DNA [Doctoral Dissertation]. Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2012.,3838. Almeida Júnior AF. As provas genéticas da filiação. São Paulo: Revista dos Tribunais; 1941.. In the 1950s, blood tests became increasingly accessible, and the degree of accuracy in paternity exclusions improved steadily - rising from less than 20% in the 1920s, to 65% in the 1950s, to over 99% after the introduction of HLA technology, introduced in Brazil in 1976 4040. Amar AM. Revisão da experiência de 23 anos em investigações de paternidade e maternidade. Arquivos da Polícia Civil de São Paulo 1984; 42:67-76.. In 1984, Dr. Ayush Morad Amar reported that he had performed 10,000 blood tests over twenty years as medical examiner at the Oscar Freire Institute, achieving a 26% exclusion rate with 1,600 tests done after 1978 4040. Amar AM. Revisão da experiência de 23 anos em investigações de paternidade e maternidade. Arquivos da Polícia Civil de São Paulo 1984; 42:67-76.. As the technology became more reliable, the courts began to weigh medical evidence more heavily, particularly when it excluded paternity 4141. Barra WE. Investigação de paternidade. Revista do Advogado 1988; 25:66-9.. After decades of debate regarding its precariousness, however, the Procedural Code of 1973 specified “the judge is not bound by the medical examination” (Art. 436). Even in the 1980s, when blood tests offered high degrees of accuracy, many judges insisted that medical proof was unreliable, and paternity must be decided on the basis of “indirect proof” and “moral certainty4242. Gomes O, Teodoro Jr. H. Direito de família. 14ª Ed. Rio de Janeiro: Forense; 2001. (p. 355).

Efforts to extend blood typing in other areas met with mixed success. Fávero advocated widespread use of blood type, suggesting it be recorded on school registration and state identity cards, a goal only attained at the University of São Paulo in 1935 3636. Finamori SD. Os sentidos da paternidade: dos "pais desconhecidos" ao exame de DNA [Doctoral Dissertation]. Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2012.. Foreshadowing larger-scale genetic studies, in the 1930s Fávero attempted to map ABO blood type among different ethnic groups - European, Brazilian, and Asian, determined by the birthplace of the subjects’ grandparents - but his research was limited to 265 University of São Paulo students, hardly a representative group 4343. Fávero F, Novah E. Os typos sanguineos no meio universitário de São Paulo. Archivos da Sociedade Medicina Legal e Criminologia de São Paulo 1938; 28-30.. By 1953, his laboratory’s data was more robust: his colleague Arnaldo Ferreira published a study that year that mapped blood types of 3,000 white, mulatto, and black Brazilians and found racial variations similar to those in the international literature 3434. Ferreira AA. Investigação médico-legal da paternidade. Revista Médica 1953; 37:1-25. Reprinted 2006; 4:142-56..

Human diversity and population genetics

As blood typing gained some traction in legal medicine, it became a key instrument in several large-scale population-level genetics studies launched in Brazil after World War II. These studies shifted hereditary frameworks from questions of individual identification to puzzles of racial ancestry and national demography and helped to cement genetics as a dynamic scientific field with international and national relevance. Starting in the 1950s, Brazil became a premier site for anthropological and genetic research into human types, a kind of “living laboratory” for exploring racial ancestry, population migrations, and regional distinctions 4444. Lindee S, Santos RV. The biological anthropology of living human populations: world histories, national styles, and international networks. Curr Anthropol 2012; 53 Suppl 5:S3-16.. With significant financial backing from the Rockefeller Foundation, this research moved into two seemingly different directions, both of which expressed profound concern with the national and evolutionary aspects of ethnic and racial diversity in Brazil.

Much of this research focused on identifying the characteristics of “racial isolates”, ostensibly primitive, or what one scholar has called “ultraprimitive” groups that exhibited pre-modern social organization and embodied unsullied pure human biology 3333. Santos RV, Kent M, Gaspar Neto VV. From degeneration to meeting point: historical views on race, mixture, and biological diversity of the Brazilian population. In: Wade P, López Beltrán C, Restrepo E, Santos RV, editors. Mestizo genomics: race mixture, nation, and science in Latin America. Durham: Duke University Press; 2014. p. 33-54.. The foremost example of this strand were studies conducted by geneticists James Neel, of the University of Michigan, and Francisco Salzano, of the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul. This duo launched their collaboration in the 1950s by tracking far into the Amazon to acquire samples from the Xavante Indians living in Mato Grosso, eventually incorporating Yanomami living between Brazil and Venezuela, as well as indigenous groups in Central America 4444. Lindee S, Santos RV. The biological anthropology of living human populations: world histories, national styles, and international networks. Curr Anthropol 2012; 53 Suppl 5:S3-16.,4545. Dent R. Including the indigenous: Xavante genes in Brazilian human population genetics since 1950. In: XXXIII International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association. San Juan: Latin American Studies Association; 2015.,4646. de Souza VS, Santos RV. The emergence of human population genetics and narratives about the formation of the Brazilian nation (1950-1960). Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci 2014; 47 Pt A:97-107..

At the same time, geneticists assessed the degree of racial admixture in Brazil’s population, confirming that it was high and variable, and a biological testament to centuries of tri-hybrid miscegenation among Portuguese, Amerindians, and Africans. The ABO system was a core technique for many of these studies. Several prominent scientists dedicated the bulk of their careers to studying racial crossing in Brazil. Newton Morton traveled from the University of Hawai’i to conduct a genetics study of migration from the more racially diverse Northeast to the Southeast, setting up his station in the São Paulo Immigrant Hotel. This living laboratory allowed him to develop widely-influential theories of genetic linkage analysis in humans, notably the LOD (logarithm of the odds) score which compared the “likelihood that traits were actually being inherited together to the likelihood that they had appeared simply by chance in the observed pattern4646. de Souza VS, Santos RV. The emergence of human population genetics and narratives about the formation of the Brazilian nation (1950-1960). Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci 2014; 47 Pt A:97-107. (p. 727). Fritz Ottensooser, a Jewish refugee whose family had fled to São Paulo, developed mathematical formulas to measure degrees of racial mixture utilizing serological analysis. He was joined by the prolific Pedro Henrique Saldanha, trained at the Universidade do Brasil in Rio de Janeiro, who published a major study of “gene flow from the white population to the black population4646. de Souza VS, Santos RV. The emergence of human population genetics and narratives about the formation of the Brazilian nation (1950-1960). Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci 2014; 47 Pt A:97-107. (p. 102) in the flagship genetics journal American Journal of Human Genetics in 1957.

All of these studies relied on classical genetic markers to “understand the formation and evolution of the composition of the Brazilian population from a genetic perspective3333. Santos RV, Kent M, Gaspar Neto VV. From degeneration to meeting point: historical views on race, mixture, and biological diversity of the Brazilian population. In: Wade P, López Beltrán C, Restrepo E, Santos RV, editors. Mestizo genomics: race mixture, nation, and science in Latin America. Durham: Duke University Press; 2014. p. 33-54. (p. 45). The underlying message was that Brazil was a melting pot of biological amalgamation, most ideally, a genetic portrait of racial synthesis and democracy. This research helped to consolidate human genetics and genomics in Brazil. With the rise of molecular technologies in the 1990s, tools became more sophisticated, including mtDNA (mitochondrial DNA), Y chromosome, and AIM (ancestry-informative markers). This quest for biogeographic archetypes continues today in studies that seek to demonstrate the degree of African ancestry among various regional populations and to underscore the tri, if not poly, hybrid genome of the entire nation 4747. Kent M, Santos RV. "The charrua are alive": the genetic resurrection of an extinct indigenous population in southern Brazil. In: Wade P, López Beltrán C, Restrepo E, Santos RV, editors. Mestizo genomics: race mixture, nation, and science in Latin America. Durham: Duke University Press; 2014. p. 109-34.,4848. Callegari-Jacques SM, Grattapaglia D, Salzano FM, Salamoni SP, Crossetti SG, Ferreira ME, et al. Historical genetics: spatiotemporal analysis of the formation of the Brazilian population. Am J Hum Biol 2003; 15:824-34.. Yet, like modalities of paternity testing, these macro-level approaches to understanding the biological and molecular composition of Brazil’s population have not provided categorical answers to complex questions of national and/or racial identity. Many scientists, including the “father” of DNA paternity testing, Sérgio Danilo Pena, a geneticist at the Federal University of Minas Gerais, have rejected race as a biological fact, explicitly viewing it as a cultural and social construct 4949. Pena SDJ. Razões para banir o conceito de raça da medicina brasileira. Hist Ciênc Saúde-Manguinhos 2005; 12:321-46..

DNA paternity testing arrives to Belo Horizonte

In the mid 1980s, Pena (2015, personal communication) learned about the work of Alec Jeffreys at the University of Leicester, who was developing novel techniques of “genetic fingerprinting” using PCR (polymerase chain reaction). In 1985 Jeffreys described the development of multilocus DNA fingerprints and surmised that this new technique could play an important role in legal cases. Within one year, this application had been used in an immigration dispute, murder case, and paternity disputes 5050. Jeffreys AJ, Pena SDJ. Brief introduction to human DNA fingerprinting. In: Pena SD, editor. DNA fingerprinting: state of the science. Boston: Springer; 1993. p. 1-20..

Pena, who had studied in the UK, the United States and Canada, was eager to bring this technique to Brazil. At the time he was running a private lab, GENE, in Belo Horizonte, and wanted to calibrate genetic fingerprinting to work in his country’s particular legal, scientific, and social environment. Aware that the judicial system remained very patriarchal, tending to hold women to a double sexual standard, he wanted to bring DNA paternity testing to Brazil. Like many of his contemporaries, Pena had experience with HLA and blood typing for paternity exclusions, but wanted the greater accuracy afforded by emergent DNA sequencing, particularly with the visualization of banding techniques. In the late 1980s, Pena performed the first DNA paternity test in Latin America. Due to his entrepreneurship, the city of Belo Horizonte became an early adapter of genetic sequencing methods, four years before the country’s second lab, in São Paulo, began doing DNA paternity tests (Sergio Pena, 2015, personal communication).

In 1993, Pena’s group demonstrated the accuracy of DNA paternity testing in an article on the techniques of F10 multilocus fingerprinting in 200 paternity cases (156 exclusions and 44 inclusions) evaluated at GENE: “it was capable of distinguishing fathers from non-fathers in every case5151. Pena SD, Chakraborty R. Paternity testing in the DNA era. Trends Genet 1994; 10:204-9. (p. 237). Pena and colleagues soon expanded beyond multi- and single-locus probes to include two additional techniques (Amp-FLPs and microsatellites) which he encouraged all laboratories to utilize, thus enabling them to “resolve all paternity disputes without any probable, possible shadow of doubt5151. Pena SD, Chakraborty R. Paternity testing in the DNA era. Trends Genet 1994; 10:204-9. (p. 209).

The 1990s witnessed an explosion of DNA paternity testing, with labs appearing throughout Brazil, the pursuit of thousands of cases of contested paternity through the court system, and increased use of testing by private clients. The São Paulo Institute of Medicine performed 600 exams each month for legal cases. An estimate by Folha de S. Paulo in 1997 reported that 6,500 exams were processed each year by private labs, with an expected increase in these numbers in coming years 3636. Finamori SD. Os sentidos da paternidade: dos "pais desconhecidos" ao exame de DNA [Doctoral Dissertation]. Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2012.,5252. Magalhães M. Mercado já movimenta R$ 6,5 mi. Folha S. Paulo 1997; 3 nov..

The impact of DNA paternity testing on family law

As geneticists and the media publicized the advent of DNA testing in the 1980s-1990s, many assumed that contentious investigations of paternity would soon become obsolete. Indeed, as the procedure became increasingly accessible over the next twenty years, countless families, particularly among the middle and upper classes, resolved disputes privately. According to Pena 1, the DNA test revolutionized family law in favor of single mothers, putting an end to their humiliation in trials in which the defense invariably attacked the woman’s sexual honor. This perspective was supported by advocates for single mothers in the 1990s, who demanded DNA tests in order to hold fathers accountable, pointing out that up to 25% of Brazilian children were not legally recognized by their fathers 1313. Caulfield S. The right to a father's name: a historical perspective on state efforts to combat the stigma of illegitimate birth in Brazil. Law and History Review 2012; 30:1-36.,5353. Thurler AL. Outros horizontes para a paternidade brasileira no século XXI? Sociedade e Estado 2006; 21:681-707.. Whereas many observers had decried the effect of previous blood tests that could only exclude, but not affirm paternity as potentially benefitting only the alleged father, DNA tests were thus promoted by Pena and others as vindication for women 5454. Pena SDJ. O DNA como (única) testemunha em determinação de paternidade. Rev Bioét 1997; 5:231-41..

More importantly, DNA testing was hailed as a tool that supported children’s rights. Brazil had been a leader in the elaboration of children’s rights legislation since passage of the Minors’ Code in 1927 (Decree n. 17,943A), though its implementation remained deficient. In the early 1980s, the global debt crisis swelled the ranks of destitute “street children”, who came to symbolize the inadequacy of social policies enacted by the 26-year military regime (1964-1985) 5555. Fonseca C. Inequality near and far: adoption as seen from the Brazilian favelas. Law Soc Rev 2002; 36:397-432.. In response, the 1988 Constitution defined children’s rights as an “absolute priority”, guaranteeing all children, whether biological or adoptive, the right to nurturance within a family and eliminating legal distinctions among them (Art. 227). In 1990, the Statute of the Child and Adolescent (Law n. 8,069/90), in consonance with the 1990 UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, defined the right to “recognition of the status of filiation” as an “inalienable, essential individual right” (Art. 27). In 2009, the statute was amended to include adopted children’s right “to know their biological origin”, although this knowledge does not establish legal parentage (Art. 48) (children born through gamete donation do not share this right) 5656. Conselho Federal de Medicina. Resolução CFM nº 2.121/2015. Diário Oficial da União 2015; 24 set.. Judicial doctrine linked the right to knowledge of genetic heritage to the right to personhood (personalidade), a core element of humanity, dignity, and citizenship 1212. Lôbo PLN. Direito ao estado de filiação e direito à origem genética: uma distinção necessária. Revista CEJ 2004; 8:47-56..

State initiatives that aimed to secure children’s right to parental recognition supported the growing faith in DNA testing. A 1992 law (Law n. 8,560/92, Art. 2) mandated a paternity investigation whenever a child’s birth was registered with only the mother’s name. The law was seldom implemented, but various state agencies embarked on “responsible paternity” campaigns, identifying fathers who had not registered their children and facilitating voluntary recognition 1313. Caulfield S. The right to a father's name: a historical perspective on state efforts to combat the stigma of illegitimate birth in Brazil. Law and History Review 2012; 30:1-36.. When an alleged father denied his paternity, officials arranged a DNA test if financial resources were available; if not, they sometimes helped women file suit. In 2003, the Supreme Court confirmed that state prosecutors could intervene in judicial proceedings on behalf of mothers and children 5757. Supremo Tribunal Federal. RE 248869-1/SP 2003. Diário da Justiça 2004; 12 mar. http://redir.stf.jus.br/paginadorpub/paginador.jsp?docTP=AC&docID=257829.
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. Until recently, the cost of DNA tests was prohibitively high for most Brazilians, leading some states, followed by the federal government, to mandate its provision free of charge in legal disputes (Law n. 10,317/2001).

Two controversial STF decisions regarding DNA testing, both of which supported prevailing trends in the jurisprudence of the STJ, also rested on children’s constitutional rights to paternal recognition and personhood. In a split 1994 habeas corpus decision, the Court determined that the state could not force someone to submit to a DNA test, but indicated that paternity would be presumed if an alleged father refused. Emphasizing the broad significance of the decision, Minister Francisco Rezek pointed out that “with the new exam, for the first time, legal truth, generally based on presumption, has come to correspond to scientific truth”, allowing the courts “to replace legal fiction [a verdade ficta, literally, fictive truth] with the real truth [a verdade real]” 5858. Supremo Tribunal Federal. HC 71373-4/RG 1994. Diário da Justiça 1996; 22 nov. http://redir.stf.jus.br/paginadorpub/paginador.jsp?docTP=AC&docID=73066.
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.

In another controversial split decision, the Court ruled in 2011 that paternity investigations that had been litigated when the parties did not have access to DNA testing could be re-tried after the lapse of the two-year limit set by law (Art. 975, Law n. 13,105/2015) 5959. Supremo Tribunal Federal. RE 363889/DF 2011. Diário da Justiça Eletrônico 2011; 15 dez. http://redir.stf.jus.br/paginadorpub/paginador.jsp?docTP=TP&docID=1638003.
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. Once again, the effects of DNA paternity testing were far-reaching: the decision opened an exception, for the first time under the 1988 Constitution, to the laws governing res judicata, the principle that precludes further litigation on an “already judged” case. While acknowledging that res judicata is necessary for judicial security, and thus democracy, the Court argued that in matters of fundamental rights, “the real truth” constitutes a higher principle. Writing for the majority, Minister Dias Toffoli quoted appeals decisions that argued that “the substitution of legal fiction with real truth” represented “the advancement of juridical science” in the service of justice, which “must be held above security, for without Justice there is no freedom5959. Supremo Tribunal Federal. RE 363889/DF 2011. Diário da Justiça Eletrônico 2011; 15 dez. http://redir.stf.jus.br/paginadorpub/paginador.jsp?docTP=TP&docID=1638003.
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(p. 26).

Both of these Supreme Court decisions hinged on the rights of children (including adult children) to obtain information regarding their ancestry and demand recognition by their fathers. The exception to res judicata, however, could also benefit men who wished to disestablish paternity, a procedure that was greatly facilitated by DNA testing. As is true around the world, DNA testing provoked intense debates over whether to lift traditional restrictions on paternity disestablishment. Among the most contentious of these debates focuses on the “marital presumption”, a nearly universal norm derived from Roman Law that attributes paternity to husbands and limits the time frame and grounds for rescission. Recent reviews of laws and jurisprudence in the United States and Europe show continued (though uneven) support for maintaining the marital presumption even when DNA testing reveals the absence of biological fatherhood 66. Browne-Barbour V. "Mama's baby, papa's maybe": disestablishment of paternity. Akron Law Rev 2015; 48:264-313.. The Brazilian courts and legislature were more receptive to the argument that the “real truth”, revealed through DNA testing, could render this legal fiction obsolete, and in 2002, the new civil code eliminated previous restrictions on husbands who wished to disestablish paternity (Arts. 178 and 340) 1818. Brasil. Lei nº 3.071, de 1º de janeiro de 1916. Código Civil dos Estados Unidos do Brasil. Diário Oficial da União 1916; 5 jan. (Arts. 1,597, 1,601, and 1,604) 6060. Brasil. Lei nº 10.406, de 10 de janeiro de 2002. Institui o Código Civil. Diário Oficial da União 2002; 11 jan..

Challenges to the “sanctification of DNA”

Despite their enthusiasm over the potential of DNA testing to reveal “the real truth”, Brazil’s jurists and legislators did not abandon the long-standing principle that medical evidence should supplement, not supplant, the corpus of legal evidence. When the Supreme Court indicated in 1994 that paternity would be presumed when the defendant refused a DNA test, it explained that “the refusal must be resolved (...) through legal instruments5858. Supremo Tribunal Federal. HC 71373-4/RG 1994. Diário da Justiça 1996; 22 nov. http://redir.stf.jus.br/paginadorpub/paginador.jsp?docTP=AC&docID=73066.
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(p. 420), allowing a judge to analyze and weigh all of the evidence 5858. Supremo Tribunal Federal. HC 71373-4/RG 1994. Diário da Justiça 1996; 22 nov. http://redir.stf.jus.br/paginadorpub/paginador.jsp?docTP=AC&docID=73066.
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. Controversy over the relative weight of a refusal continued over the next two decades, finally resulting in a 2009 law that placed the presumption “in the context of other evidence” (Law n. 12,004/2009) 6161. Lôbo PLN. Paternidade socioafetiva e o retrocesso da Súmula no 301 do STJ. Revista Jus Navigandi 2006; 11(1036).. Moreover, refusal by a child did not carry a corresponding presumption of the absence of paternity 6262. Superior Tribunal de Justiça. REsp 1.115.428-SP. Informativo de Jurisprudência 2013; 20 nov. http://www.stj.jus.br/SCON/SearchBRS?b=INFJ&tipo=informativo&livre=@COD=%270530%27.
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. Most importantly, although DNA evidence alone was generally sufficient to establish paternity in the interest of the child, by 2011, jurisprudence had firmly established that it was not sufficient for disestablishment of paternity by a legal father. In its exception to res judicata, for example, the Supreme Court indicated that the precedent would apply only to cases in which “there is not a dispute between paternity of a biological type and paternity of an affective type5959. Supremo Tribunal Federal. RE 363889/DF 2011. Diário da Justiça Eletrônico 2011; 15 dez. http://redir.stf.jus.br/paginadorpub/paginador.jsp?docTP=TP&docID=1638003.
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(p. 2).

These decisions reflected the intense doctrinal and jurisprudential debate that accompanied the incorporation of DNA testing into family law in Brazil and around the world. The most pressing concern was (and is) that legal support for DNA testing, and massive publicity surrounding it, encouraged fathers to “resolve their doubts” without consideration for the best interests of the child, an issue that was also raised by social scientists 1414. Fonseca C. Parentesco, tecnologia e lei na era do DNA. Rio de Janeiro: EDUERJ; 2014.,6363. Fonseca C. Paternidade brasileira na era do DNA: a certeza que pariu a dúvida. Cuadernos de Antropologia Social 2005; (22):27-51.,6464. Milanich N. Blood will sell. https://medium.com/@NaraMilanich/blood-will-sell-add5cd8179c5#.g91tldn34 (accessed on 15/Oct/2016).
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,6565. Draper H, Ives J. Paternity testing: a poor test of fatherhood. J Soc Welf Fam Law 2009; 31:407-18.. As Finamori 3636. Finamori SD. Os sentidos da paternidade: dos "pais desconhecidos" ao exame de DNA [Doctoral Dissertation]. Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2012. observes, this dilemma was not new: it had arisen when legal-medical specialist Flamínio Fávero first introduced ABO blood testing in Brazil in 1927. Fávero himself believed that since the process could prove devastating to a child, paternity exams should be legally permitted only as part of a judicial process in which the judge carefully considered the circumstances of the case 3636. Finamori SD. Os sentidos da paternidade: dos "pais desconhecidos" ao exame de DNA [Doctoral Dissertation]. Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2012.. The advent of DNA testing heightened this concern. In France and Germany, the two countries whose civil law had most influenced Brazil’s since the nineteenth century, legislators prohibited private paternity testing, allowing it only with a court order.

In Brazil, where the law did not limit access to DNA paternity testing, many critics noted that by the early 2000s, the role of family court judges had been reduced to “merely verifying the test results” in paternity cases. The nation’s leading family law specialists derided this trend as the “biologization of paternity” or “sanctification of DNA” 6666. Madaleno R. A sacralização da presunção na investigação de paternidade. http://www.rolfmadaleno.com.br/novosite/conteudo.php?id=30 (accessed on 21/Jun/2016).
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,6767. Rodrigues CS. O exame de DNA e sua influência nas ações de investigação de paternidade. Direito & Justiça 2005; 31(2). http://revistaseletronicas.pucrs.br/ojs/index.php/fadir/article/view/570.
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. A common early complaint was that DNA testing unnecessarily strained the budgets of public legal services when less costly HLA blood testing was often equally effective. Moreover, like earlier generations of jurists, many were concerned about the reliability of biological evidence in the absence of consistent state regulation and oversight of the exams at public and private laboratories. Complaints of poor quality control and even fraud were common, and many tests had to be resubmitted multiple times 88. Fachin LE. Da paternidade: relação biológica e afetiva. Belo Horizonte: Del Rey; 1996.,3636. Finamori SD. Os sentidos da paternidade: dos "pais desconhecidos" ao exame de DNA [Doctoral Dissertation]. Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2012.,6767. Rodrigues CS. O exame de DNA e sua influência nas ações de investigação de paternidade. Direito & Justiça 2005; 31(2). http://revistaseletronicas.pucrs.br/ojs/index.php/fadir/article/view/570.
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.

The most significant criticism rested on moral and philosophical grounds. Just as it became possible to prove biological paternity with near certainty, the longstanding emphasis on social and emotional attributes of paternity gained new significance. The trend was not unique to Brazil, but according to legal scholar Paulo Lôbo, Brazilian doctrine has moved further in this direction than that of any other nation 6868. Lôbo PLN. Socioafetividade em família e a orientação do STJ. Revista Jus Navigandi 2013; 18(3760).. Lôbo does not support this claim with extensive comparative research, but his account identifies the particular ways the concept developed in Brazilian legal doctrine. A major catalyst was the 1988 Constitution, which led legal scholars to reconceptualize the family through the principles of equality, non-discrimination, and human dignity. This facilitated the adaptation of family law to social reality, at a time when the wave of social mobilization that had shaped the constitution’s human rights framework inspired new demands for children’s rights and equality for increasingly varied family forms 5555. Fonseca C. Inequality near and far: adoption as seen from the Brazilian favelas. Law Soc Rev 2002; 36:397-432.,6969. Caulfield S. From liberalism to human dignity: the transformation of marriage and family rights in Brazil. In: Moses J, editor. Ties that bind: global histories of marriage and modernity. London: Bloomsbury; in press..

In the late 1990s, jurists affiliated with the Brazilian Institute of Family Law (IBDFAM), a progressive legal association, adopted the term “socio-affective” (a term also used in Francophone nations 7070. Gallus N. Le droit de la filiation rôle de la vérité socio-affective et de la volonté en droit belge. Brussels: Larcier; 2009.) as a way to describe and advocate for protection of these and other “plural family forms” 88. Fachin LE. Da paternidade: relação biológica e afetiva. Belo Horizonte: Del Rey; 1996.,99. Welter BP. Igualdade entre as filiações biológica e socioafetiva. São Paulo: Editora Revista dos Tribunais; 2003.,6868. Lôbo PLN. Socioafetividade em família e a orientação do STJ. Revista Jus Navigandi 2013; 18(3760).,7171. Boeira JBR. Investigação de paternidade. Posse de estado de filho. Paternidade socioafetiva. Porto Alegre: Livraria do Advogado; 1999.. Lôbo notes that the concept of the socio-affective family, borrowed from the social sciences, is especially appropriate in Brazil, where scholars have long observed the strong tradition in popular culture of non-consanguineous family formation through consensual unions, informal adoption, and other practices 5555. Fonseca C. Inequality near and far: adoption as seen from the Brazilian favelas. Law Soc Rev 2002; 36:397-432.,6868. Lôbo PLN. Socioafetividade em família e a orientação do STJ. Revista Jus Navigandi 2013; 18(3760).,7272. Cardoso RCL. Creating kinship: the fostering of children in favela families in Brazil. In: Smith RT, editor. Kinship ideology and practice in Latin America. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 1984. p. 196-203.,7373. Moreno AZ. Vivendo em lares alheios: filhos de criação e adoção em São Paulo colonial e em Portugal, 1765-1822. São Paulo: Annablume; 2013. (though the same could be said regarding Latin America as a whole 7474. Leinaweaver J. Introduction: cultural and political economies of adoption in Latin America. J Lat Am Caribb Anthropol 2009; 14:1-19.,7575. Milanich N. Latin American childhoods and the concept of modernity. In: Fass P, editor. The Routledge history of childhood in the Western world. New York: Routledge; 2013. p. 491-508.). Brazilian scholars and feminist activists have also long observed the especially deep roots of the patriarchal and “patrimonial” model of family in law and society. Their struggle to dismantle it did not begin with the 1988 Constitution, but had accompanied the elaboration of family law from its inception in the nineteenth century 6969. Caulfield S. From liberalism to human dignity: the transformation of marriage and family rights in Brazil. In: Moses J, editor. Ties that bind: global histories of marriage and modernity. London: Bloomsbury; in press..

Like their predecessors of earlier decades, jurists affiliated with IBDFAM argued that social and emotional bonds should constitute legal grounds for paternity investigations, but no longer merely as evidence of a biological relationship. Their influence was felt in jurisprudence and legislative reform efforts such as a 2005 bill to prohibit disestablishment of paternity “in cases where possession of status of filiation has been established”. The proposal explicitly challenged the conflation of “real truth” with the results of DNA testing while asserting that this error was being corrected by “doctrine and jurisprudence [that] has increasingly emphasized that the real paternal-filial relationship does not derive from biological truth, but rather socio-affective truth7676. Projeto de Lei nº 4.946. Diário da Câmara dos Deputados 2005; 2 abr. (p. 9788).

Although the 2005 bill did not become law, this norm was solidified in national jurisprudence through scores of cases of contested paternity heard by federal appeals courts over the decade that followed. It was applied most consistently in cases in which the mother’s companion had assumed paternity of her child by another man and “legalized” the relationship by signing the child’s birth registry, a practice so common that it is known as “Brazilian-style adoption” 5555. Fonseca C. Inequality near and far: adoption as seen from the Brazilian favelas. Law Soc Rev 2002; 36:397-432.. According to research by anthropologist Claudia Fonseca in the State of Rio Grande do Sul, in 2002-2003, many such fathers procured a DNA test in order to disestablish paternity after separating from the mother, and judges routinely approved their petitions 6363. Fonseca C. Paternidade brasileira na era do DNA: a certeza que pariu a dúvida. Cuadernos de Antropologia Social 2005; (22):27-51.. Yet cases of this sort were frequently overturned on appeal, and by 2006, several state appeals courts had “enshrined the understanding that so-called ‘Brazilian-style adoption’ ... is irrevocable7777. Superior Tribunal de Justiça. REsp 884.560/MS 2006. Diário da Justiça Eletrônico 2008; 12 set. https://ww2.stj.jus.br/processo/revista/documento/mediado/?componente=MON&sequencial=4205009&num_registro=200601935691&data=20080912.
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(p. 2). The federal appeals court upheld this position, viewing “Brazilian-style adoption” as a form of “real adoption”, based on the father’s informed consent and the child’s possession of status 7878. Superior Tribunal de Justiça. REsp 1088157/PB 2008. Diário da Justiça Eletrônico 2009; 4 ago. https://ww2.stj.jus.br/processo/revista/documento/mediado/?componente=ITA&sequencial=896969&num_registro=200801995643&data=20090804&formato=PDF.
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,7979. Superior Tribunal de Justiça. REsp 1098036/GO 2008. Diário da Justiça Eletrônico 2012; 1 mar. https://ww2.stj.jus.br/processo/revista/documento/mediado/?componente=ITA&sequencial=1083493&num_registro=200802396702&data=20120301&formato=PDF.
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. Yet the STJ also established that a child who was adopted “Brazilian style” does has the right to disestablish legal paternity on the basis of a DNA test, arguing that this is consistent with the prioritization of the best interests of the child and the fundamental right to personhood 8080. Superior Tribunal de Justiça. REsp 1167993/RS. Informativo de Jurisprudência 2013; (512), 20 fev. http://www.stj.jus.br/SCON/SearchBRS?b=INFJ&tipo=informativo&livre=@COD=%270512%27.
http://www.stj.jus.br/SCON/SearchBRS?b=I...
.

In decisions regarding cases in which a man claims to have been deceived when he established legal paternity (a situation known as “paternity fraud” in the United States), appeals courts have been less likely to discount the biological “truth”, and there has been conflicting jurisprudence. Influential decisions in 2006 and 2007 established that a in such cases, a legal father, whether or not married to the child’s mother, has the right to rescind paternity on the basis of a DNA test, and the child’s best interest lies in the “real truth” 7777. Superior Tribunal de Justiça. REsp 884.560/MS 2006. Diário da Justiça Eletrônico 2008; 12 set. https://ww2.stj.jus.br/processo/revista/documento/mediado/?componente=MON&sequencial=4205009&num_registro=200601935691&data=20080912.
https://ww2.stj.jus.br/processo/revista/...
,8181. Superior Tribunal de Justiça. REsp 878.954/RS, 2007. Diário da Justiça Eletrônico 2007; 28 mai. https://ww2.stj.jus.br/processo/revista/documento/mediado/?componente=ITA&sequencial=689273&num_registro=200601823490&data=20070528&formato=PDF.
https://ww2.stj.jus.br/processo/revista/...
. In 2013, however, the STJ published a verdict that exemplifies its jurisprudence: “the STJ has enshrined the understanding that ... to disestablish paternity requires demonstration, at the same time, of the absence of biological origins and also that possession of status of filiation, marked by socio-affective relations, has not been constituted6262. Superior Tribunal de Justiça. REsp 1.115.428-SP. Informativo de Jurisprudência 2013; 20 nov. http://www.stj.jus.br/SCON/SearchBRS?b=INFJ&tipo=informativo&livre=@COD=%270530%27.
http://www.stj.jus.br/SCON/SearchBRS?b=I...
(p. 10).

This does not mean that the tension between biological and socio-affective paternity has been definitively resolved. Disputes continue to generate conflicting decisions; the doctrine influenced by progressive legal scholarship does not consistently prevail in family court, public policy, or popular culture; and new situations and arguments constantly emerge. Examples include demands for legal recognition of “parental multiplicity”, or more than two parents, and “parallel families”, traditionally characterized as a man’s simultaneous relationships with more than one woman and their respective children, as well as issues surrounding assisted reproduction, such as gamete donors’ right to anonymity 8282. Couto C. Famílias paralelas e poliafetivas. Revista Jus Navigandi 2015; 20(4409).,8383. Gozzo D. A controversa norma do CNJ sobre registro em caso de reprodução assistida. O Estado de S. Paulo 2016; 12 out.. As Lôbo indicated in 2004, the criteria for determining when socio-affective paternity should take precedence over biology, and what is in the best interest of the child, continues to require careful attention to specific circumstances, and to socio-cultural and technological changes, on a case-by-case basis 1212. Lôbo PLN. Direito ao estado de filiação e direito à origem genética: uma distinção necessária. Revista CEJ 2004; 8:47-56..

Conclusion

Exploring the history of legal contests over paternity in Brazil highlights the complexities and tensions that have accompanied the development of identification sciences, whether applied to individual families or population groups. Over the past century, for Brazilian scientists and their international collaborators, Brazil was an ideal laboratory for the elaboration and use of biotypology and a field site for large-scale population genetics. In their quest to map Brazil’s composition, these scientists confirmed that the country is characterized not by fixed racial or ethnic types, but by complex ancestry and significant regional variation. At the same time, Brazilian jurists struggled to apply identification sciences in the courts, with limited success. Ironically, the arrival of DNA testing in the 1980s, despite its high level of accuracy, did not enshrine genetic science as the ultimate arbiter of either racial identity or family relationships. On both the macro level of population and nation, and the micro level of individual and family, genetic identification techniques resulted in most cases not in precision and certitude but in a range of “shadows of doubt” and in legal doctrine that distinguishes socio-affective from genetic paternity. By the turn of the twenty-first century, jurists and scientists alike came to embrace social and cultural criteria not merely as proxy for biological proof of racial or family identity, but as its fundamental constitutive element. The holy grail of truth sought by identification and juridical science ultimately was not found in DNA, but rather in the shifting relationship between biological and cultural dimensions of individual and collective identity.

Acknowledgments

We thank the University of Michigan Brazil Initiative for support for travel and research, special issue co-editors Dora Chor and Ricardo Ventura Santos for their incisive feedback, Leandro Carvalho for his expert editorial assistance, and two anonymous reviewers for their constructive criticism on early drafts.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    08 May 2017

History

  • Received
    24 June 2016
  • Reviewed
    25 Oct 2016
  • Accepted
    15 Dec 2016
Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública Sergio Arouca, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: cadernos@ensp.fiocruz.br