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Research Handbook on Art, Culture and Heritage Law

Edited by: Sophie Vigneron, Janet Ulph, Antoinette Maget Dominicé

ISBN13: 9781800374218
To be Published: March 2026
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £270.00





This interdisciplinary Research Handbook brings together leading scholars from different disciplines to explore art, culture and heritage law, their definition, protection and contestation. It critically assesses legal frameworks and ethical practices through four challenges: sustainable development, intergenerational equity, decolonisation and cultural rights.

Adopting both a theoretical and practical approach, contributors debate the key areas in art, culture and heritage law, including the nature of cultural heritage, ethics and the art market, the development of international norms on the protection of cultural heritage, repatriation and its consequences, trafficking in peacetime and the intentional destruction of heritage and looting in wartime. Chapters discuss the significance of provenance research from both legal and ethical perspectives, outlining the changeable nature of heritage objects and the connections they can forge. This Research Handbook ultimately underscores the significance of cross-disciplinary research and public participation in cultural and heritage issues, drawing insights from law, criminology and sociology.

The Research Handbook on Art, Culture and Heritage Law is a valuable resource for scholars and students of law, particularly those interested in the evolution of art and cultural heritage law. It is also a necessary read for those in related fields such as criminology, archaeology, museology and cultural studies.

Subjects:
Art and Cultural Heritage Law
Contents:
1. Introduction 1
Janet Ulph, Antoinette Maget Dominicé and Sophie Vigneron

PART I CONCEPTS
2. Authentic v fake 12
Sophie Vigneron
3. Circulation, journey and itineraries of cultural objects 35
Rosemary A. Joyce
4. Cultural heritage as a concept in religious studies 48
Andrew J. M. Irving
5. Heritage and identity 67
Mirosław Michał Sadowski
6. Cultural heritage and destruction 80
Leva Wenzel
7. Digital cultural heritage as a concept 98
Jörg Lehmann

PART II INTERNATIONAL FRAMEWORKS
8. The development of the International Cultural Heritage Law Framework 115
Sebastian M. Spitra
9. Heritage and sovereignty 134
Andrzej Jakubowski
10. Participation of non-state actors in cultural heritage management and
rulemaking 151
Alice Lopes Fabris
11. International heritage law and communities 174
Lucas Lixinski

PART III INTERNATIONAL CONVENTIONS
12. The 1954 Hague Convention 188
Emma Cunliffe
13. Dissecting international cultural heritage crimes 210
Anne-Marie Carstens
14. The 1970 UNESCO Convention 232
Patty Gerstenblith
15. Back to the future 253
Giuditta Giardini and Marina Schneider
16. World heritage and sustainable development 268
Sophia Labadi
17. The 2001 UNESCO Convention on the Protection of the Underwater
Cultural Heritage 280
Elena Perez-Alvaro
18. The Council of Europe conventions 297
Robert Pickard

PART IV DOMESTIC PERSPECTIVES
19. Cultural heritage law in the United States 321
Derek Fincham
20. The safeguarding of cultural heritage 342
Jorge Sánchez Cordero
21. Between Prague and Ljubljana 358
Wolfgang Wieshaider
22. Cultural heritage as a legal and political construct 369
Marie Cornu and Noé Wagener
23. From a moral function to a utilitarian function 383
Jihane Chedouki

PART V THE ART TRADE
24. Ethics and the art market 405
Janet Ulph
25. Provenance, due diligence and discourse(s) 426
Marie Cornu and Antoinette Maget Dominicé
26. Provenance as accountability 441
Lynn Rother, Max Koss and Fabio Mariani
27. Art export controls 458
Anna Pirri Valentini
28. Transnational criminal regulation and its domestic effects on the art trade 474
Saskia Hufnagel
29. EU Regulation 2019/880 on the import of cultural goods 500
Neil Brodie
30. Exploring aspects of the online trade in antiquities through snapshot
analysis 513
Emily Peacock and Donna Yates

PART VI RESTITUTION AND RETURN
31. ADR and the Indigenous repatriation claim 529
Debbie De Girolamo
32. Cross-border restitution 552
Evelien Campfens
33. The return of cultural objects 569
Kristin Hausler
34. To share or not to share? Shared heritage in the post-colonial context 584
Marie-Marie-Sophie de Clippele
35. Digital activism as tool for the return of cultural objects 609
Emiline Smith
36. Restitution beyond the object 627
Andrea Wallace, Francesca Farmer and Mathilde Pavis