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State Succession in Cultural Property [Kietas viršelis]

(Assistant Professor, Institute of Law Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 394 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 240x163x28 mm, weight: 750 g
  • Serija: Cultural Heritage Law and Policy
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Jun-2015
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198738064
  • ISBN-13: 9780198738060
  • Formatas: Hardback, 394 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 240x163x28 mm, weight: 750 g
  • Serija: Cultural Heritage Law and Policy
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Jun-2015
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198738064
  • ISBN-13: 9780198738060
The demise and rebirth of states brings with it a set of very complicated legal issues, among which is the question of how to deal with that state's cultural heritage, whether within its boundaries or not. Through a historical analysis of state dissolution and succession and its impact on cultural heritage from 1815 to present day, the work will identify guiding principles to facilitate the conclusion of agreements on the status of cultural property following the succession of states. Studying primary materials and evidence of state practice that has not been available before, the work will propose a novel approach to state succession from the perspective of the emerging interest of the international community to safeguard cultural heritage. State succession is one of the most obscure areas of international law since its rules are characterized either by their absence or their inconsistency.

This book explores to what extent the principles and practice of state succession correspond to the evolution of the concept of cultural heritage in international law. It provides an extensive analysis of the alternations of the international practice and legal doctrine of state succession to tangible cultural heritage since the formation of the European nation-states in the nineteenth century - through the experience of decolonization to the post-Cold War dissolution of multinational states. The book has been awarded Prize of the Professor Manfred Lachs Foundation and Kozminski University in Warsaw for the best monograph in public international law published by a Polish author in 2015, in the category of debuts. On 24 November 2016, the book State Succession in Cultural Property by Andrzej Jakubowski was awarded the Prize of the Professor Manfred Lachs Foundation and Kozminski University in Warsaw for the best monograph in public international law published by a Polish author in 2015, in the category of debuts.

Daugiau informacijos

Winner of the Professor Manfred Lachs Foundation and Kozminski University Prize
Table of Cases xv
Table of Instruments xvii
List of Abbreviations xxv
Introduction 1(28)
1 The Meaning and Relevance of Cultural Heritage
2(8)
2 Legal Effects of State Succession on Tangible Cultural Heritage
10(13)
3 Methodology and Structure
23(6)
I Emergence And Elaboration Of Principles (1815-1939)
1 Territoriality, Nation-State, and the Integrity of National Patrimony in the Nineteenth Century
29(24)
1.1 Concept of territoriality
30(13)
1.2 State and national patrimony
43(4)
1.3 The principle of territoriality and the integrity of national patrimony in the practice of state succession
47(5)
1.4 Conclusion
52(1)
2 State Succession in Cultural Property: Peace Treaty Practice (1918-1939)
53(38)
2.1 Self-determination and cultural patrimony
55(7)
2.2 Allocation of cultural property-the complexity of the post-First World War regulations
62(1)
2.3 Restoration of national patrimonies displaced or lost in relation to the First World War
63(2)
2.4 Territorial cession and the allocation of cultural property
65(2)
2.5 Dissolution of a multinational state and reintegration of national patrimonies
67(16)
2.6 Succession to colonial territories and the status of cultural patrimony
83(2)
2.7 Conclusion-a legal appraisal
85(6)
II Consolidation And Codification Of The Law (1940-1989)
3 The Second World War, Decolonization, and State Succession in Cultural Property
91(45)
3.1 Cultural property in the post-Second World War legal landscape
94(6)
3.2 Post-Second World War Europe and state succession in cultural property
100(17)
3.3 Decolonization in matters of cultural property
117(17)
3.4 Conclusion
134(2)
4 In Search of a New Global Order: The Codification of State Succession and the Development of International Cultural Heritage Law
136(41)
4.1 Cultural genocide, war plunder, and restitution
139(5)
4.2 Normative framework for the protection of the cultural heritage of mankind-the World Heritage Convention
144(2)
4.3 Self-determination and tangible cultural heritage
146(6)
4.4 The protection of movable cultural property and the restitution debate: action by UNESCO
152(7)
4.5 The International Law Commission and state succession to cultural property
159(8)
4.6 The 1983 Vienna Convention
167(5)
4.7 Conclusion
172(5)
III Building A New Consensus On Cultural Heritage: State Succession After 1989
5 State Succession in State Property and Tangible Cultural Heritage in the Post-Cold War Context
177(61)
5.1 State succession revisited
180(11)
5.2 The post-Cold War state succession and cultural heritage: doctrinal approaches
191(7)
5.3 Cultural property and historic archives in the post-Cold War practice of state succession: select case-studies
198(37)
5.4 Conclusion
235(3)
6 New Horizons of State Succession: Reconciliation and Cultural Cooperation
238(83)
6.1 Cultural heritage obligations in state succession
242(28)
6.2 The human and cultural heritage framework for Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo
270(5)
6.3 Past territorial and population transfers-solutions based on the procedural principle of international cultural cooperation
275(15)
6.4 Post-colonial reconciliation and international cultural cooperation
290(12)
6.5 State succession and world heritage
302(6)
6.6 State succession to underwater cultural heritage
308(10)
6.7 Conclusion
318(3)
7 Conclusion
321(14)
7.1 Passing of state cultural property
322(4)
7.2 Succession to international cultural heritage obligations
326(4)
7.3 State succession and international responsibility
330(1)
7.4 Procedural principles of dispute settlements
331(1)
7.5 Best practices and guiding principles
332(3)
Annex: Draft Proposal of Guiding Principles Relating to the Succession of States in respect of Tangible Cultural Heritage 335(6)
Select Bibliography 341(22)
Index 363
Andrzej Jakubowski is Assistant Professor at the Institute of Law Studies of the Polish Academy of Sciences.