
Contents
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1. Introduction 1. Introduction
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2. The Lack of a Specialist ICHL Instrument to Address Disaster Scenarios 2. The Lack of a Specialist ICHL Instrument to Address Disaster Scenarios
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3. Disaster Risk Reduction and the Protection of Cultural and Natural Heritage 3. Disaster Risk Reduction and the Protection of Cultural and Natural Heritage
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3.1 Assessing the Legal Relevance of International Cultural Heritage Law Instruments for DRR Activities 3.1 Assessing the Legal Relevance of International Cultural Heritage Law Instruments for DRR Activities
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3.2 The Influence of International Disaster Law Paradigms in the Protection of World Heritage Sites 3.2 The Influence of International Disaster Law Paradigms in the Protection of World Heritage Sites
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4. The Cross-Fertilization between International Disaster Law Instruments and International Cultural Heritage Law Ones for the Protection of Cultural Heritage through DRR Activities 4. The Cross-Fertilization between International Disaster Law Instruments and International Cultural Heritage Law Ones for the Protection of Cultural Heritage through DRR Activities
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5. Relief and Recovery Phases and the Safeguard of Cultural and Natural Heritage 5. Relief and Recovery Phases and the Safeguard of Cultural and Natural Heritage
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6. Concluding Remarks: The Need for Increased Cross-Fertilizations between International Disaster Law and International Cultural Heritage Law 6. Concluding Remarks: The Need for Increased Cross-Fertilizations between International Disaster Law and International Cultural Heritage Law
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7 Cultural Heritage and Disasters
Get accessGiulio Bartolini is Associate Professor of International Law, Department of Law, Roma Tre University editor-in-Chief of the Yearbook of International Disaster Law. He is responsible for the Jen Monnet Project ‘Disseminating Disaster Law for Europe’. Email: giulio.bartolini@uniroma3.it
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Published:08 October 2020
Cite
Abstract
This chapter addresses the main legal, institutional, and operative challenges to the protection of cultural and natural heritage along the temporal phases of a disaster. Recent disasters have demonstrated how cultural and natural heritage can suffer significantly from calamitous events. Despite the frequency and magnitude of disasters, the international legal framework has paid little attention to legal challenges posed by the protection of cultural and natural heritage in disaster settings, a situation compounded by the absence of in-depth scholarly analysis. The chapter then examines how international cultural heritage law (ICHL) has so far addressed this topic, also in light of the increasing cross-fertilization with inputs provided by an emerging branch, namely international disaster law (IDL). It also highlights the so-called ‘cycles of a disaster’, commonly arranged along the phases of mitigation and preparedness, relief and recovery.
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