In war, belligerents sometimes intentionally destroy treasured artifacts of their adversary's culture or plunder those artifacts to fund their own war effort. Members of a society sometimes destroy elements of their own cultural heritage as symbols of values or historical practices they repudiate. The essays in this superb collection carefully examine the full range of moral, legal, and evaluative issues raised by the meanings, value, and vulnerability of cultural artifacts - issues that have hitherto been unjustifiably neglected by those of us who have written about the morality of war.

Jeff McMahan, Sekyra and White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, University of Oxford, author of Killing in War

The destruction of cultural heritage amidst violence and atrocities is not new, but the post- Cold War era has delivered not only death and displacement but cultural wastelands as well. These essays provide invaluable insights for analysts and practitioners to understand what is happening and what can be done about it.

Thomas G. Weiss, Presidential Professor of Political Science, City University of New York Graduate Center

This volume is a timely, truly indispensable contribution to its field. Thoughtful and wide ranging, the essays constitute a thoughtful exploration of the high stakes of cultural heritage and preservation, now and for generations to come.

Julian Siggers, President and CEO, The Field Museum

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During the last two decades, the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Syria have impacted every archaeologist, museum curator, and expert in cultural property. This book is the first to synthesize the legal and cultural issues with which we've dealt and to offer strategies for cultural property protection in the future.

C. Brian Rose, James B. Pritchard Professor of Archaeology, University of Pennsylvania

A vital contribution to the emerging intersection of heritage, security and international law, this volume is highly relevant to the increasing level of conflict surrounding cultural heritage at home and abroad. This impressive interdisciplinary set of contributions from leading scholars tackles the difficult moral, legal and political issues and the array of actors involved, from international organizations and state authorities to non-state actors. A timely and ethical intervention.

Lynn Meskell, Professor of Anthropology, Penn Museum

Conflict over cultural heritage has increasingly become a standard part of war. Today, systematic exploitation, manipulation, attacks, and destruction of cultural heritage by state and non-state actors form part of most violent conflicts across the world. Such acts are often intentional and based on well-planned strategies for inflicting harm on groups of people and communities. With this increasing awareness of the role cultural heritage plays in war, scholars and practitioners have progressed from seeing conflict-related destruction of cultural heritage as a cultural tragedy to understanding it as a vital national security issue. There is also a shift from the desire to protect cultural property for its own sake to viewing its protection as connected to broader agendas of peace and security. Concerns about cultural heritage have thus migrated beyond the cultural sphere to worries about the protection of civilians, the financing of terrorism, societal resilience, post-conflict reconciliation, hybrid warfare, and the geopolitics of territorial conflicts. This volume seeks to deepen public understanding of the evolving nexus between cultural heritage and security in the twenty-first century. Drawing on a variety of disciplines and perspectives, the chapters in this volume examine a complex set of relationships between the deliberate destruction and misuse of cultural heritage in times of conflict, on the one hand, and basic societal values, legal principles, and national security, on the other.
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Preface Acknowledgments List of Contributors List of Abbreviations Introduction: Cultural Heritage and Armed Conflict: Preserving Art While Protecting Life Frederik Rosén PART I. THE VALUE OF CULTURAL HERITAGE 1. Preserving Valuable Objects and Sites, in Times of War and at Other Times Derek Gillman 2. The "Cultural Turn" and the Reconstruction of Heritage Helen Frowe and Derek Matravers 3. Mission Impossible: Weighing the Protection of Cultural Property against Human Lives Frederik Rosén 4. Weaponizing Culture: A Limited Defense of the Destruction of Cultural Heritage in War Duncan MacIntosh 5. The Concept of Cultural Genocide Martin Hamilton PART II. LEGAL AND SECURITY ASPECTS OF CULTURAL HERITAGE PRESERVATION 6. Combating Illicit Trade in Cultural Objects to Defend Peace and Security Kristin Hausler and Andrzej Jakubowski 7. Cultural Property Protection in the Context of Counter Terrorist Financing: An Emerging Legal Paradigm Ricardo A. St. Hilaire 8. Non-Party Obligations for Cultural Property in Armed Conflict under the 1954 Hague Convention, Protocol II Elizabeth Varner 9. The International Criminal Court and Cultural Property: What Is the Crime? Mark A. Drumbl 10. Training for Cultural Property Protection Laurie W. Rush PART III. HEALING THE PAST: REPATRIATION OF STOLEN ART AND CULTURE 11. Wartime Loot in American Museums: Lessons from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Victoria Reed 12. Nazi Looting and Internal and External Colonial Plundering: Differences in Responses Jos van Beurden 13. Syrian and Iraqi Opinion on Protecting, Promoting, and Reconstructing Heritage after the Islamic State Benjamin Isakhan and James Barry 14. The Geopolitical Context of Cultural Heritage Destruction Carsten Paludan- Müller Index
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In war, belligerents sometimes intentionally destroy treasured artifacts of their adversary's culture or plunder those artifacts to fund their own war effort. Members of a society sometimes destroy elements of their own cultural heritage as symbols of values or historical practices they repudiate. The essays in this superb collection carefully examine the full range of moral, legal, and evaluative issues raised by the meanings, value, and vulnerability of cultural artifacts - issues that have hitherto been unjustifiably neglected by those of us who have written about the morality of war.
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"In war, belligerents sometimes intentionally destroy treasured artifacts of their adversary's culture or plunder those artifacts to fund their own war effort. Members of a society sometimes destroy elements of their own cultural heritage as symbols of values or historical practices they repudiate. The essays in this superb collection carefully examine the full range of moral, legal, and evaluative issues raised by the meanings, value, and vulnerability of cultural artifacts - issues that have hitherto been unjustifiably neglected by those of us who have written about the morality of war." -- Jeff McMahan, Sekyra and White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, University of Oxford, author of Killing in War "The destruction of cultural heritage amidst violence and atrocities is not new, but the post- Cold War era has delivered not only death and displacement but cultural wastelands as well. These essays provide invaluable insights for analysts and practitioners to understand what is happening and what can be done about it." -- Thomas G. Weiss, Presidential Professor of Political Science, City University of New York Graduate Center "This volume is a timely, truly indispensable contribution to its field. Thoughtful and wide ranging, the essays constitute a thoughtful exploration of the high stakes of cultural heritage and preservation, now and for generations to come." -- Julian Siggers, President and CEO, The Field Museum "During the last two decades, the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Syria have impacted every archaeologist, museum curator, and expert in cultural property. This book is the first to synthesize the legal and cultural issues with which we've dealt and to offer strategies for cultural property protection in the future." -- C. Brian Rose, James B. Pritchard Professor of Archaeology, University of Pennsylvania "A vital contribution to the emerging intersection of heritage, security and international law, this volume is highly relevant to the increasing level of conflict surrounding cultural heritage at home and abroad. This impressive interdisciplinary set of contributions from leading scholars tackles the difficult moral, legal and political issues and the array of actors involved, from international organizations and state authorities to non-state actors. A timely and ethical intervention." -- Lynn Meskell, Professor of Anthropology, Penn Museum
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Claire Finkelstein is the Algernon Biddle Professor of Law and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania and a distinguished research fellow at the Annenberg Public Policy Center (APPC) as well as a senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute (FPRI). She is the Founder and Faculty Director of Penn's Center for Ethics and the Rule of Law. An expert in the law of armed conflict, military ethics, and national security law, she is a co-editor (with Jens David Ohlin) of The Oxford Series in Ethics, National Security, and the Rule of Law and a well-published author in the areas of national security and democratic governance. Professor Finkelstein is a frequent radio, broadcast, and print commentator. Derek Gillman is Distinguished Teaching Professor, Art History and Museum Leadership, and Executive Director of University Collections and Exhibitions, Drexel University. He was President of the Barnes Foundation from 2006-13 and, prior to that, of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. He is author of The Idea of Cultural Heritage (Cambridge University Press), a board member of the International Cultural Property Society, an emeritus member of the Association of Art Museum Directors, and a consulting scholar in the Asian Section of the University of Pennsylvania Museum. Frederik Rosén holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Copenhagen and directs the Nordic Center for Cultural Heritage and Armed Conflict. His prior positions include Associate Professor at the faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen, and Senior Researcher and the Danish Institute for International Studies. Dr. Rosé©n has for a decade functioned as a key advisor to governments and international organizations on cultural property protection in relation to armed conflicts. He has published extensively on international law and security, including the monograph Collateral Damage. A Candid History of Peculiar Form of Death (2016).
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Selling point: Seeks to deepen our understanding of the evolving nexus between cultural heritage and security in the twenty-first century Selling point: Discusses some of the most fundamental questions and tensions inherent in the foundations of democracy Selling point: Explores the enterprise of protecting and preserving a culture premised on free expression, controversy, and even contradictory values that may seem doomed by some to failure from the outset Selling point: Examines the relationships between deliberate violence to cultural heritage in times of conflict, and basic societal values, legal principles, and security concerns Selling point: Includes contributions from a wide range of experts in the field
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780197610565
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
807 gr
Høyde
162 mm
Bredde
237 mm
Dybde
36 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
496

Om bidragsyterne

Claire Finkelstein is the Algernon Biddle Professor of Law and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania and a distinguished research fellow at the Annenberg Public Policy Center (APPC) as well as a senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute (FPRI). She is the Founder and Faculty Director of Penn's Center for Ethics and the Rule of Law. An expert in the law of armed conflict, military ethics, and national security law, she is a co-editor (with Jens David Ohlin) of The Oxford Series in Ethics, National Security, and the Rule of Law and a well-published author in the areas of national security and democratic governance. Professor Finkelstein is a frequent radio, broadcast, and print commentator. Derek Gillman is Distinguished Teaching Professor, Art History and Museum Leadership, and Executive Director of University Collections and Exhibitions, Drexel University. He was President of the Barnes Foundation from 2006-13 and, prior to that, of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. He is author of The Idea of Cultural Heritage (Cambridge University Press), a board member of the International Cultural Property Society, an emeritus member of the Association of Art Museum Directors, and a consulting scholar in the Asian Section of the University of Pennsylvania Museum. Frederik Rosén holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Copenhagen and directs the Nordic Center for Cultural Heritage and Armed Conflict. His prior positions include Associate Professor at the faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen, and Senior Researcher and the Danish Institute for International Studies. Dr. Rosén has for a decade functioned as a key advisor to governments and international organizations on cultural property protection in relation to armed conflicts. He has published extensively on international law and security, including the monograph Collateral Damage. A Candid History of Peculiar Form of Death (2016).