
Contents
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1. Introduction 1. Introduction
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2. Domestic Law Trends across the Region 2. Domestic Law Trends across the Region
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3. The Universal in the Regional 3. The Universal in the Regional
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4. Forging Regional Identity through Heritage 4. Forging Regional Identity through Heritage
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5. Policy Programmes: Development through Culture 5. Policy Programmes: Development through Culture
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6. Standard-Setting in the Americas: Roerich and Beyond 6. Standard-Setting in the Americas: Roerich and Beyond
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7. Concluding Remarks 7. Concluding Remarks
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37 Central and South America
Get accessLucas Lixinski Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, UNSW Sydney. Rapporteur, International Law Association Committee on Participation in Global Cultural Heritage Governance. Vice President, Association of Critical Heritage Studies. Email: l.lixinski@unsw.edu.au
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Published:08 October 2020
Cite
Abstract
This chapter discusses the protection of cultural heritage in Central and South America. The key defining features of Central and South American regional efforts in the field of heritage are the use of heritage as a tool for development and the connection between heritage and indigeneity. With respect to development, the main approach is policy-driven, explained both by the nature of the objective (economic) and by the fact that most organizations engaging in this area have reduced mandates for rule-making with respect to heritage. With indigeneity, rule-making is stronger, engaging a proud tradition of international lawmaking in the region, which started as part of a Pan-American reliance on the rules of international law to shield Central and South American nations from European colonialism and US neo-colonialism. In the specific area of heritage, there is certainly a conversation between the regional and the global that needs to be accounted for.
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