Conflict antiquities’ rescue or ransom: The cost of buying back stolen cultural property in contexts of political violence

IF 0.6 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY International Journal of Cultural Property Pub Date : 2021-02-01 DOI:10.1017/S0940739121000084
S. Hardy
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Abstract Rescue has long been a defense for the removal of cultural property. Since the explosion of iconoclasm in West Asia, North Africa, and West Africa, there has been a growing demand for cultural property in danger zones to be “rescued” by being purchased and given “asylum” in “safe zones” (typically, in the market countries of Western Europe and North America). This article reviews evidence from natural experiments with the “rescue” of looted antiquities and stolen artifacts from across Asia and Europe. Unsurprisingly, the evidence reaffirms that “rescue” incentivizes looting, smuggling, and corruption, as well as forgery, and the accompanying destruction of knowledge. More significantly, “rescue” facilitates the laundering of “ordinary” illicit assets and may contribute to revenue streams of criminal organizations and violent political organizations; it may even weaken international support for insecure democracies. Ultimately, “rescue” by purchase appears incoherent, counter-productive, and dangerous for the victimized communities that it purports to support.
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冲突文物的拯救或赎金:在政治暴力背景下买回被盗文化财产的成本
摘要救援长期以来一直是保护文化财产的一种手段。自从西亚、北非和西非的反传统主义爆发以来,人们越来越需要通过在“安全区”(通常是西欧和北美的市场国家)购买和提供“庇护”来“拯救”危险地区的文化财产。本文回顾了来自亚洲和欧洲的掠夺文物和被盗文物的自然实验证据。不出所料,证据重申,“救援”会激励抢劫、走私和腐败,以及伪造和随之而来的知识破坏。更重要的是,“救援”有助于清洗“普通”非法资产,并可能为犯罪组织和暴力政治组织提供收入来源;它甚至可能削弱国际社会对不安全民主国家的支持。最终,通过购买进行的“救援”对其声称支持的受害社区来说似乎是不连贯的、适得其反的和危险的。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Cultural Property
International Journal of Cultural Property HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
14.30%
发文量
13
期刊最新文献
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