把野蛮人挡在门口:联合国教科文组织和统法协公约对发展中国家的承诺

MichaelD.E. Goodyear
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摘要

文化财产的非法贸易是一种全球现象,犯罪网络和走私列车为艺术世界的黑市牺牲了当地文化。伊斯兰国交换被盗文化财产获利丰厚的新闻头条,以及其他事件,提高了非法文化财产贸易在全球舞台上的知名度。发展中国家作为文化财产最主要的来源国,尤其处于危险之中。现有的学者们提出了新的国际条约来保护文化财产,或建议利用邻近的法律领域来解决这一危机。但是,这些解决办法忽视了关于文化财产的两项现有国际条约,即联合国教育、科学及文化组织(“教科文组织”)和联合国国际统一私法研究所(“统一私法研究所”)公约的现成好处。虽然教科文组织和统法协的公约并没有为非法文化财产贸易提供绝对的解决办法,但它们是可利用的和未充分利用的选择,是特别为协助发展中国家而调整的。更多地批准教科文组织和统法协公约将使来源国缔约国享有市场国家缔约国的进口条例和国内法院制度的执行利益,并且随着签署国数目的增加,公约的效力也将增加。强加给发展中国家的成本被刻意压低,以帮助它们进行保护和恢复。此外,这两项公约的通过并不妨碍缔约国考虑和执行进一步保护文化财产的其他机制。因此,教科文组织和统法协公约为发展中国家更好地保护其文化财产提供了现成的、未充分利用的选择。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Keeping the Barbarians at the Gates: The Promise of the UNESCO and UNIDROIT Conventions for Developing Countries
The illicit trade in cultural property is a global phenomenon, powered by criminal networks and smuggling trains that sacrifice local culture for the black market of the art world. Headlines featuring the Islamic State’s lucrative exchange in stolen cultural property, among other incidents, have raised the profile of the illicit cultural property trade on the global stage. Developing countries, as the most prominent source countries of cultural property, are particularly at risk. Existing scholarship has searched for a solution to this crisis, suggesting a new international treaty to protect cultural property or recommending the utilization of adjacent legal fields. However, these solutions overlook the ready benefits of two existing international treaties on cultural property, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (“UNESCO”) and United Nations International Institute for the Unification of Private Law (“UNIDROIT”) Conventions. While the UNESCO and UNIDROIT Conventions do not provide an absolute solution to the illicit cultural property trade, they are accessible and underutilized options that are particularly calibrated to assist developing countries. Increased ratification of the UNESCO and UNIDROIT Conventions would grant source country States Parties the enforcement benefits of the import regulations and domestic court systems of market country States Parties, and the strength of the Conventions would rise as the number of signatories increases. The costs imposed on developing country signatories are deliberately low to aid them in protection and recovery. Furthermore, the adoption of these two Conventions does not constrain States Parties from contemplating and implementing additional mechanisms to further protect cultural property. The UNESCO and UNIDROIT Conventions thus offer ready, underutilized options for developing countries to better protect their cultural property.
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