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The 1972 World Heritage Convention
A Commentary
Edited by Francesco Francioni Federico Lenzerini
602 pages
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234x156mm
978-0-19-929169-4
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Hardback
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27 March 2008
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This item is printed to order. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.
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- Article by article analysis of the World Heritage Convention
- Discusses topical issues raised by the destruction by the Taliban of the Buddhas of Bamiyán, and the shelling of Dubrovnik
- Includes practical perspectives from the last 30 years, including the practice of the World Heritage Committee
- Includes full text of the World Heritage Convention itself, and the newly revised Operational Guidelines
The World Heritage Convention (WHC) is the most comprehensive and widely ratified among UNESCO treaties on the protection of cultural and natural heritage. The Convention establishes a system of identification, presentation, and registration in an international List of cultural properties and natural sites of outstanding universal value. Throughout the years the WHC has progressively attained almost universal recognition by the international community, and even the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia has recently considered sites inscribed in the World Heritage List as "values especially
protection by the international community." Besides, the WHC has been used as a model for other legal instruments dealing with cultural heritage, like the recently adopted (2003) Convention on the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage.
During its more than 30 years of life, the Convention has undergone extensive interpretation and evolution in its scope of application. Operational Guidelines, which are the implementing rules governing the operation of the Convention, have been extensively revised. New institutions such as the World Heritage Centre, have been established. New links, with the World Bank and the United Nations, have developed to take into account the economic and political dimension of world heritage conservation and management. However, many
legal issues remain to be clarified. For example, what is the meaning of "outstanding universal value" in the context of cultural and natural heritage? How far can we construe "universal value" in terms of representivity between the concept of "World Heritage" and the sovereignty of the territorial state? Should World Heritage reflect a reasonable balance between cultural properties and natural sites? Is consent of the territorial state required for the inscription of a World Heritage property in the List of World Heritage in Danger? What is the role of the World Heritage Centre in the management of the WHC?
No comprehensive work has been produced so far to deal with these and many other issues that have arisen in the interpretation and application of the WHC. This
Commentary is intended to fill this gap by providing article by article analysis, in the light of the practice of the World Heritage Committee, other relevant treaty bodies, as well as of State parties and in the hope that it may be of use to academics, lawyers, diplomats and officials involved in the management and conservation of cultural and natural heritage of international significance. Readership: Academics, scholars, and advanced students in the fields of International Environmental Law; Public International Law; Treaties Interpretation; and Cultural and Heritage Studies. Also Tourism officials and ministries.
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Edited by Francesco Francioni, Professor of International Law, European University Institute, Florence Federico LenzeriniContributors: F. Francioni A. Yusuf C. Redgwell B. Boer G. Carducci K. Last T. Scovazzi G. P. Buzzini L. Condorelli F. Lenzerini A. F. Vrddjak A. Lemaistre L. Patchett V. Vujicic and M. Richon
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"This book offers valuable insights into the World Heritage Convention and its operation, bringing together contributors from several areas of the world, both academics and practitioners." - European Journal of Legal Studies, Volume 2, No. 1
"...fills a gap in the literature pertaining to the international protection of cultural properties. It is an important contribution for a proper understanding of this Convention, because it offers a remarkable overall analysis of the content of this international instrument and of the manner in which it is implemented at the national and international level.
This book is a complete and useful reference for anyone interested in these issues, including judges, administrators, and operators in the cultural and environmental fields, at national and international levels. The commentary is indeed a valuable resource, which facilitates the understanding of the scope of the rights and obligations arising from the World Heritage Convention." - Sabrina Urbinati, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italian Yearbook of International Law, Vol XVIII
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F. Francioni: Preamble
A. Yusuf: Definition of Cultural Heritage
K. Last: Article I Cultural Landscape
C. Redgwell: Article 2 Definition of Natural Heritage
B. Boer: Article 3 Identification and Deliniation of World Heritage
G. Carducci: Articles 4-7 National and International Protection of the ultural and Natural Heritage
T. Scovazzi: Articles 8-11 World Heritage Committee and World Heritage List
L. Condorelli: Article 11 List of World Heritage in Danger
F. Lenzerini: Article 12 Protection of Properties not Inscribed on the World Heritage List
A. F. Vrdoljak: Article 13 World Heritage Committee and International Assistance
A. F. Vrdoljak: Article 14 The Secretariat and Support of the World Heritage Committee
F. Lenzerini: Articles 15-16 World Heritage Fund
L. Patchett: Articles 17-18 Activities to Supprt of the World Heritage Fund
VI Educational Programmes
A. Lemaistre and F. Lenzerini: Articles 19-20 International Assistance
V. Vujicic-Lugassy and M. Richon: Article 27-28 Educational Programmes
VIII Final Clauses
B. Boer: Articles 29 Reports
F. Lenzerini: Articles 30-22 and 35-38 Final Clauses
B.Boer: Article 34 The Federal Clause
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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