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Culture and Armed Conflict: Destruction of Cultural Heritage as Method of Ethnic Cleansing (CROSBI ID 700189)

Prilog sa skupa u zborniku | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Špadina, Helga Culture and Armed Conflict: Destruction of Cultural Heritage as Method of Ethnic Cleansing // Culture and International Law: Proceedings of the International Conference / Hikmahanto, Juwana ; Jeffrey, Thomas ; Mohd Hazmi, Mohd Rusli et al. (ur.). London : Delhi: CRC Press, 2019. str. 1-10

Podaci o odgovornosti

Špadina, Helga

engleski

Culture and Armed Conflict: Destruction of Cultural Heritage as Method of Ethnic Cleansing

Deliberate damage of historical monuments and buildings dedicated to art, culture, religion or science was forbidden by the international humanitarian law (or law of armed conflict) and subject to legal proceedings as early as from 1907 when the Hague Regulation IV explicitly prohibited destruction of cultural treasures and religious shrines. In different times of history, protection of cultural property during conflicts was regarded unimportant when compared to military targeting and goals of the warfare. Wars in former Yugoslavia brought in new dimension of armed conflict – historical monuments were deliberately targeted to destroy cultural identity of a nation. This was supposed to lead to ethnic cleansing of a certain area. Further development of international humanitarian law resulted in formation of international criminal tribunals and adoption of their viewpoint that deliberate targeting of cultural heritage constitutes war crimes. The most recently, UN Security Council Resolution 2347 from 2017 condemns unlawful destruction of cultural heritage. This paper will analyze legal arguments and assessment of used by International Tribunal for former Yugoslavia related to the destruction of cultural heritage as method of ethnic cleansing. It will explore whether awareness of the status of UNESCO World Heritage Site demonstrated perpetrators willingly strived to inflict longer-reaching damage to the nation and whether this should be used as aggravating circumstance. Finally, we will analyze whether destruction of monuments indeed obstructs post-conflict recovery.

Cultural heritage ; humanitarian law ; protection

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Podaci o prilogu

1-10.

2019.

objavljeno

Podaci o matičnoj publikaciji

Culture and International Law: Proceedings of the International Conference

Hikmahanto, Juwana ; Jeffrey, Thomas ; Mohd Hazmi, Mohd Rusli ; Dhiana, Puspitawati

London : Delhi: CRC Press

781138387669

Podaci o skupu

Nepoznat skup

ostalo

29.02.1904-29.02.2096

Povezanost rada

Pravo

Poveznice