Spring 2027 • Seminar
Cultural Heritage, International Law, and Politics
Prerequisite: Public International Law
Exam Type: No Exam
How does international law regulate cultural heritage? To what extent do existing legal frameworks meaningfully address claims for restitution, repatriation, and redress? Are contemporary debates about cultural artifacts, cultural sites, and cultural property fundamentally legal disputes? How do they expose the limits of international law itself?
This seminar will introduce students to the rules, institutions, and political dynamics governing cultural heritage at the international and domestic levels. We will examine treaties alongside non-binding instruments and national statutory frameworks. The course will situate these systems in relation to specific fields of public international law, including international humanitarian law and international criminal law.
Through case studies, we will explore real-world interpretive dilemmas and contested claims. Particular attention will be paid to the relationship between political commitments and legal obligations, the role of international institutions and domestic courts, and the strategic framing of restitution arguments in multilateral fora.