
Contents
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1. Introduction 1. Introduction
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2. Oceanic States and International Law 2. Oceanic States and International Law
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3. Regional Programmes 3. Regional Programmes
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4. Regional Organizations 4. Regional Organizations
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5. World Heritage 5. World Heritage
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6. World Heritage List 6. World Heritage List
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6.1 World Heritage Operational Guidelines 6.1 World Heritage Operational Guidelines
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6.2 Legal Pluralism and Customary Land Ownership 6.2 Legal Pluralism and Customary Land Ownership
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6.3 UNESCO SIDS Action Plan 2016–2021 6.3 UNESCO SIDS Action Plan 2016–2021
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7. Intangible Cultural Heritage 7. Intangible Cultural Heritage
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8. Remaining UNESCO Conventions 8. Remaining UNESCO Conventions
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9. Comparative National Approaches 9. Comparative National Approaches
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10. Conclusion 10. Conclusion
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36 Oceania
Get accessCraig Forrest is the Director of the Marine and Shipping Law Unit, and Fellow of the Centre for Public, International and Comparative Law at the University of Queensland. Professor Forrest teaches and undertakes research in the areas of maritime law, private international law, and cultural heritage law. Email: [email protected]
Jennifer Corrin is Director of Comparative Law in the Centre for Public, International and Comparative Law at The University of Queensland (UQ). Jennifer’s research focuses on law reform and development in plural legal regimes. Before joining UQ, Jennifer spent five years at the University of the South Pacific, having joined the faculty after nine years in her own legal firm in Solomon Islands. Email: [email protected]
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Published:08 October 2020
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Abstract
This chapter addresses the protection of cultural heritage in Oceania. How the peoples of Oceania relate to their environment is through the prism of heritage. That heritage is holistic, embracing all life, and is both tangible and intangible. Understood through cultural traditions, it defines their cultural identity and remains inseparable from their social, economic, and environmental well-being. The States of Oceania have not engaged with the protection of cultural heritage at an international level, and, while party to the World Heritage and Intangible Cultural Heritage Conventions, the level of protection is modest, though increasing in significance.
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