This impressive book 'follows an innovative, interdisciplinary approach based in law, history, art history, anthropology and archaeology'.
Kevin McVeigh, Law Society Gazette
Rich with historical detail, legal analysis, and contemporary application, this book focuses on the state of cultural objects - those displaced without consent - and how a path toward reparative justice might address continuing violence. ...Produced in a field and a moment that is quick to rationalize the challenges cultural objects face through strictly moral and ethical constraints, the text is exemplary for its careful attention to the legislative and policy standards that have constituted a problematic basis for restitutive claims. Should any one of the aforementioned articulations pique a reader's curiosity, this book serves as a foundational resource for understanding the complex historical and juridical environment surrounding one of the most pressing discourses in the museum and collection worlds today.
Lucas Gómez-Doyle, Religious Studies Review