Sandholtz' work makes rewarding reading for political scientists and international lawyers alike for the many thoughts that it provokes.

Ingo Venzke, European Journal of International Law Vol 19

For much of history, the rules of war decreed that "to the victor go the spoils." The winners in warfare routinely seized for themselves the artistic and cultural treasures of the defeated; plunder constituted a marker of triumph. By the twentieth century, international norms declared the opposite, that cultural monuments should be shielded from destruction or seizure. Prohibiting Plunder traces and explains the emergence of international rules against wartime looting of cultural treasures, and explores how anti-plunder norms have developed over the past 200 years. The book covers highly topical events including the looting of thousands of antiquities from the Iraqi National Museum in Baghdad, and the return of "Holocaust Art" by prominent museums, including the highly publicized return of five Klimt paintings from the Austrian Gallery to a Holocaust survivor. The historical narrative includes first-hand reports, official documents, and archival records. Equally important, the book uncovers the debates and negotiations that produced increasingly clear and well-defined anti-plunder norms. The historical accounts in Prohibiting Plunder serve as confirming examples of an important dynamic of international norm change. Rules evolve in cycles; in each cycle, specific actions trigger arguments about the meaning and application of rules, and those arguments in turn modify the rules. International norms evolve through a succession of such cycles, each one drawing on previous developments and each one reshaping the normative context for subsequent actions and disputes. Prohibiting Plunder shows how historical episodes interlinked to produce modern, treaty-based rules against wartime plunder of cultural treasures.
Les mer
1: International Norm Change Chapter ; 2: Plunder and the Spoils of Victory Chapter ; 3: Napoleonic Plunder and the Emergence of Norms Chapter ; 4: The International Law Activists: Elaborating Norms in the 19th Century Chapter ; 5: The Great War and the Protection of Art Chapter ; 6: Nazi Plunder: Strengthening the Rules Chapter ; 7: Codifying Norms: Nuremberg and the Hague Chapter ; 8: War in the 1990s: Crimes against Cultural Heritage Chapter ; 9: Repercussions of Nazi Plunder: Internalizing International Norms Chapter ; 10: Baghdad and Beyond Chapter ; 11: Dynamics of International Norm Changel Chapter ; Will also include 4-5 black and white line drawings.
Les mer
"Important and timely. It serves to bridge a debate between international relations and international law as well as between constructivism and rational choice. The overall result is quite enlightening and enjoyable. It delivers more than it promises and the reader not only finds an elegant retelling of the story of war plunder, but also a fine discussion of the development of rules of war and war crimes tribunals." Professor Kendall Stiles, Brigham Young University "The topic is interesting, even fascinating, and it is altogether surprising that no one has done this before. Sandholtz puts forward a simple model of normative change and uses it very effectively to show that norms on wartime plunder have changed over the centuries. He writes clearly; his prose never calls attention to itself or the author. Readers will know what Sandholtz values, but he doesn't let his values cloud his judgment or dictate the story. What more could we ask?" Nicholas Onuf, Professor Emeritus of Florida International University "This book offers a significant theoretical contribution, as well as a fascinating historical analysis of changing norms of wartime plunder. Among its many strengths is clarity, thoughtfulness, and high quality scholarship. It offers a portable analytic framework that is sure to inspire further empirical analysis." Professor Susan Sell of the Elliot School of International Affairs at George Washington University
Les mer
Selling point: Traces and explains the emergence of international rules against wartime looting of cultural treasures, and explores how anti-plunder norms have developed over the past 200 years Selling point: Covers highly topical events including the looting of thousands of antiquities from the Iraqi National Museum in Baghdad, and the return of "Holocaust Art" by prominent museums Selling point: Includes first-hand reports, official documents, and archival records Selling point: Uncovers the debates and negotiations that produced increasingly clear and well-defined anti-plunder norms Selling point: Shows how historical episodes interlinked to produce modern, treaty-based rules against wartime plunder of cultural treasures
Les mer
Selling point: Traces and explains the emergence of international rules against wartime looting of cultural treasures, and explores how anti-plunder norms have developed over the past 200 years Selling point: Covers highly topical events including the looting of thousands of antiquities from the Iraqi National Museum in Baghdad, and the return of "Holocaust Art" by prominent museums Selling point: Includes first-hand reports, official documents, and archival records Selling point: Uncovers the debates and negotiations that produced increasingly clear and well-defined anti-plunder norms Selling point: Shows how historical episodes interlinked to produce modern, treaty-based rules against wartime plunder of cultural treasures
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780195337235
Publisert
2007
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
655 gr
Høyde
160 mm
Bredde
234 mm
Dybde
31 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
352

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