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While nations, societies, and individuals have always been engaged with both the tangible and intangible aspects of cultural objects, such as archaeological artifacts, artworks, and historical documents, the twenty-first century is seeing a significant shift in the law, ethics, and public policy that have long characterized this field. This book offers a comprehensive analysis of recent developments concerning cultural property. It identifies the underlying forces that drive these changes, focusing on the new political balance between source countries and market countries, the strengthening of cross-border lawmaking and law enforcement, the growing impact of provenance research and due diligence as legal, professional, and ethical norms, and the transformative role of digital databases. The book sets out normative principles for designing a better synergy of the hard law and soft law mechanisms that govern cultural property policy and markets. It proposes a property theory of ownership and custody of cultural objects and outlines a model of 'new cultural internationalism' to promote cross-border collaboration on cultural heritage, including new restitution frameworks.
List of contents
Introduction; Part I. Drivers of Change in the World of Cultural Property: 1. Changing winds in the cross-border politics of cultural property; 2. Lawmaking, law enforcement, and 'legalistic ethical reasoning'; 3. The evolution of norms on due diligence and provenance research; 4. The transformative role of digital databases; Part II. Drivers of Change in the World of Cultural Property: 5. A theory of ownership and custody of cultural objects; 6. Restitution for an era of new cultural internationalism.
About the author
Amnon Lehavi (J.S.D., Yale) is the Provost, Atara Kaufman Professor of Law, and former Dean of the Law School at Reichman University. He serves as a National Correspondent at UNIDROIT (The International Institute for the Unification of Private Law) and an Adjunct Professor at Luiss University. Prof. Lehavi served as Co-President of the Law Schools Global League (LSGL). His previous books published by Cambridge University Press include Property Law in a Globalizing World (2019) and The Construction of Property: Norms, Institutions, Challenges (2013).