Ivan Vucetic

Ivan Vucetic (1858-1925), in Argentina known as Juan Vucetich, was a criminologist and anthropologist born on the island of Hvar, in that time called Lessina. He was one of the pioneers of the scientific datiloscopy (identification by fingerprints) and occupied the position of the director of the Center for Daktiloscopy in Buenos Aires. His method of identification was in use throughout South America. Vucetic was also the one who introduced the notion of daktiloscopy in 1920, now in current use worldwide.

Ivan Vucetic devised an original instrument for classification of fingerprints called dactilonome.
The police school in La Plata is bearing his name: Escuela de policia Juan Vucetich, as well as the Argentinean Police museum, and even a High Technical Institute Juan Vucetich. See his biography
Vida
y obra de Juan Vucetich in
Spanish,
offered by
Argentinean Escuela de Policia, and in
English.
Nearly 350,000 Croats
live in Argentina
today. It
is interesting
that in 1933 the Croatian community in Argentina collected about 50,000
signatures
asking for the right of the Croats to live in the free and independent
state.
Similarly in the
USA.
For more information see Ivan Vucetic, Juan Vucetich 1858.-1925. [PDF], concept author & event coordinator Ljerka Galic, Croatian Heritage Foundation, Zagreb 2008., ISBN 978-953-6525-47-8