Weaponising antiquities. ISIS’s exploitation of cultural property and international response: an analysis of ISIS’s peculiarities and the shortcomings of international heritage protection to protect cultural property against non-State actors

Abdelaoui, Mona (A.A. 2020/2021) Weaponising antiquities. ISIS’s exploitation of cultural property and international response: an analysis of ISIS’s peculiarities and the shortcomings of international heritage protection to protect cultural property against non-State actors. Tesi di Laurea in Diplomacy and negotiation, Luiss Guido Carli, relatore Pasquale Ferrara, pp. 99. [Master's Degree Thesis]

Full text for this thesis not available from the repository.

Abstract/Index

ISIS’s strategic exploitation of cultural property: an unprecedented challenge. The intentional destruction of cultural property by ISIS: from opportunistic to strategic. Iconoclasm and ideology: a religious justification to the destruction of cultural property. Establishing a new State through the erasure of history. Strategic destruction as a component of war. The dual-exploitative approach of cultural property as a source of revenue. Looting for profit: estimating the extent of ISIS’s funds generated by its illicit traffic. The antiquities division and institutionalisation of the illicit traffic. The international legal framework to prevent illicit trafficking and its shortcomings. The 1954, 1970 and 1972 UNESCO conventions. Complementary international conventions: the UNIDROIT and Nicosia conventions. United Nations security council resolutions: binding instruments to move away from a State- focused approach? The path forward: harmonising legislations to successfully deter and criminalise the illicit traffic. Discrepancies in the perception of cultural property and practical impact. Venues for prosecution at a standstill.

References

Bibliografia: pp. 70-88.

Thesis Type: Master's Degree Thesis
Institution: Luiss Guido Carli
Degree Program: Master's Degree Programs > Master's Degree Program in International Relations (LM-62)
Chair: Diplomacy and negotiation
Thesis Supervisor: Ferrara, Pasquale
Thesis Co-Supervisor: Thatcher, Mark
Academic Year: 2020/2021
Session: Autumn
Deposited by: Alessandro Perfetti
Date Deposited: 15 Feb 2022 09:19
Last Modified: 15 Feb 2022 09:19
URI: https://tesi.luiss.it/id/eprint/31462

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