Cultural property policy in the United States has become increasingly lawless, for lack of a better term. In recent years, the executive branch has aggressively restricted the movement of cultural property into the United States, but it has repeatedly done so without regard for constraining legal authority. The result is a troubling disjunction between the executive branch\u27s (the Executive ) current cultural property policies and the existing legal framework established by Congress and the Judiciary. We document that disjunction in this Article. We explain, for example, how the executive branch has recently repatriated an Egyptian sarcophagus and an antique French automobile to their respective countries of origin, but it disregarded we...
Who owns the relics of cultures past? Worldwide trade in stolen art and antiquities is estimated to ...
Italy has a long tradition of pervasive regulation of its national cultural heritage, including stri...
Cultural property offers a significant yet ambiguous example of the development of global regulatory...
Cultural property policy in the United States has become increasingly lawless, for lack of a better ...
In the recurring and contentious debates regarding the President’s authority to declare (and perhaps...
This Comment recommends that Congress take action to bring consistency to the treatment of cultural ...
This article reviews the shift in cultural property litigation in the United States over the past tw...
This Comment explores the various legal methods designed to protect cultural property and to prevent...
Cultural property is subject to two international legal regimes, one of which protects cultural prop...
Nations feel an obligation to provide-indeed, a nation\u27s citizens may demand-protection for their...
The foundation of cultural property laws was laid at the Hague Convention on the Protection of Cultu...
Artifact-rich countries have recently begun to campaign more vigorously for the return of their cult...
Can Congress pick and choose when it must follow the Constitution? One would expect not, and yet the...
In today’s panel concerning the reform of U.S. cultural property policy, panelists discussed whether...
The article argues that the dichotomy between nationalism and internationalism with respect to cultu...
Who owns the relics of cultures past? Worldwide trade in stolen art and antiquities is estimated to ...
Italy has a long tradition of pervasive regulation of its national cultural heritage, including stri...
Cultural property offers a significant yet ambiguous example of the development of global regulatory...
Cultural property policy in the United States has become increasingly lawless, for lack of a better ...
In the recurring and contentious debates regarding the President’s authority to declare (and perhaps...
This Comment recommends that Congress take action to bring consistency to the treatment of cultural ...
This article reviews the shift in cultural property litigation in the United States over the past tw...
This Comment explores the various legal methods designed to protect cultural property and to prevent...
Cultural property is subject to two international legal regimes, one of which protects cultural prop...
Nations feel an obligation to provide-indeed, a nation\u27s citizens may demand-protection for their...
The foundation of cultural property laws was laid at the Hague Convention on the Protection of Cultu...
Artifact-rich countries have recently begun to campaign more vigorously for the return of their cult...
Can Congress pick and choose when it must follow the Constitution? One would expect not, and yet the...
In today’s panel concerning the reform of U.S. cultural property policy, panelists discussed whether...
The article argues that the dichotomy between nationalism and internationalism with respect to cultu...
Who owns the relics of cultures past? Worldwide trade in stolen art and antiquities is estimated to ...
Italy has a long tradition of pervasive regulation of its national cultural heritage, including stri...
Cultural property offers a significant yet ambiguous example of the development of global regulatory...