Site Title: Cultural Heritage and Mass Atrocities

Edited by James Cuno and Thomas G. Weiss

Table of Contents

  • Contents 
  • Foreword 
  • Preface and Acknowledgments 
  • List of Abbreviations 
  • Introduction 
  • Part 1. Values 
    • Introduction 
    • 1. Identity and Cultural Heritage 
    • 2. Why Do We Value Cultural Heritage? 
    • 3. Learning from History 
    • 4. Cultural Heritage of Late Antiquity 
    • 5. Written Heritage of the Muslim World 
    • 6. The Value of Cultural Heritage 
  • Part 2. Under Siege: Recent Case Studies 
    • Introduction 
    • 7. Uyghur Heritage 
    • 8. Post-Conflict Sri Lanka and Afghanistan 
    • 9. The War on Heritage in Iraq 
    • 10. The Destruction of Aleppo 
    • 11. The Lost Heritage of Homs 
    • 12. Reconstruction, Who Decides? 
    • 13. Yemen’s Manuscript Culture 
    • 14. Cultural Heritage at Risk in Mali 
    • 15. Indigenous Guatemalan Heritage 
  • Part 3. Populations at Risk 
    • Introduction 
    • 16. Cultural Cleansing and Mass Atrocities 
    • 17. Human Life and Cultural Heritage in War 
    • 18. Saving Stones and Saving Lives 
    • 19. Engaging Nonstate Armed Groups 
    • 20. Transitional Justice Strategies 
  • Part 4. International Law 
    • Introduction 
    • 21. Protecting Cultural Heritage 
    • 22. International Humanitarian Law 
    • 23. International Human Rights Law 
    • 24. Customs and General Principles 
    • 25. Prosecuting Heritage Destruction 
    • 26. Terrorist Attacks on World Heritage 
  • Part 5. Military Perspectives 
    • Introduction 
    • 27. War and Religious Heritage 
    • 28. From Kyoto to Baghdad to Tehran 
    • 29. Cultural Heritage in Wartime 
    • 30. Peace Operations 
    • 31. Cultural Property in Armed Conflict 
    • 32. When Peace Breaks Out 
  • Conclusion 
  • Suggested Readings 
  • Contributors 
  • About 
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Chicago “Contents.” In Cultural Heritage and Mass Atrocities, by James Cuno and Thomas G. Weiss. Los Angeles: Getty Publications, 2022. https://www.getty.edu/publications/cultural-heritage-mass-attrocities/contents/.
MLA “Contents.” Cultural Heritage and Mass Atrocities, by James Cuno and Thomas G. Weiss. Getty Publications, 2022. https://www.getty.edu/publications/cultural-heritage-mass-attrocities/contents/. Accessed DD Mon. YYYY.
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Contents

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  • Foreword — Irina Bokova 
  • Preface and Acknowledgments — James Cuno and Thomas G. Weiss 
  • List of Abbreviations 
  • Introduction — James Cuno and Thomas G. Weiss 
  • Part 1. Cultural Heritage and Values 
    • Introduction: Part 1 — James Cuno and Thomas G. Weiss 
    • 1. Who Are We? Identity and Cultural Heritage — Kwame Anthony Appiah 
    • 2. Why Do We Value Cultural Heritage? — Neil MacGregor 
    • 3. Cultural Heritage under Attack: Learning from History — Hermann Parzinger 
    • 4. The Cultural Heritage of Late Antiquity — Glen W. Bowersock 
    • 5. The Written Heritage of the Muslim World — Sabine Schmidtke 
    • 6. Valuing the Legacy of our Cultural Heritage — Ismail Serageldin 
  • Part 2. Cultural Heritage under Siege: Recent Cases 
    • Introduction: Part 2 — James Cuno and Thomas G. Weiss 
    • 7. Uyghur Heritage under China’s “Anti-Religious Extremism” Campaigns — Rachel Harris 
    • 8. When Peace is Defeat, Reconstruction is Damage: “Rebuilding” Heritage in Post-Conflict Sri Lanka and Afghanistan — Kavita Singh 
    • 9. Performative Destruction: Da’esh (ISIS) Ideology and the War on Heritage in Iraq — Gil Stein 
    • 10. The Destruction of Aleppo: The Impact of the Syrian War on a World Heritage City — Francesco Bandarin 
    • 11. The Lost Heritage of Homs: The Impact of the Syrian War on a World Heritage City — Marwa al-Sabouni 
    • 12. Reconstruction, Who Decides? — Frederick Deknatel 
    • 13. Yemen’s Manuscript Culture under Attack — Sabine Schmidtke 
    • 14. Cultural Heritage at Risk in Mali: The Destruction of Timbuktu’s Mausoleums of Saints — Lazare Eloundou Assomo 
    • 15. Indigenous Threatened Heritage in Guatemala — Victor Montejo 
  • Part 3. Cultural Heritage and Populations at Risk 
    • Introduction: Part 3 — James Cuno and Thomas G. Weiss 
    • 16. Cultural Cleansing and Mass Atrocities — Simon Adams 
    • 17. Choosing between Human Life and Cultural Heritage in War — Hugo Slim 
    • 18. Saving Stones and Saving Lives: A Humanitarian Perspective on Protecting Cultural Heritage in War — Paul H. Wise 
    • 19. Engaging Nonstate Armed Groups in the Protection of Cultural Heritage — Jennifer M. Welsh 
    • 20. After the Dust Settles: Transitional Justice and Identity in the Aftermath of Cultural Destruction — Philippe Sands and Ashrutha Rai 
  • Part 4. Cultural Heritage and International Law 
    • Introduction: Part 4 — James Cuno and Thomas G. Weiss 
    • 21. Protecting Cultural Heritage: The Ties between People and Places — Patty Gerstenblith 
    • 22. International Humanitarian Law and the Protection of Cultural Property — Benjamin Charlier and Tural Mustafayev 
    • 23. International Human Rights Law and Cultural Heritage — Marc-André Renold and Alessandro Chechi 
    • 24. Customs, General Principles, and the Intentional Destruction of Cultural Property — Francesco Francioni 
    • 25. Prosecuting Heritage Destruction — Joseph Powderly 
    • 26. Fighting Terrorist Attacks against World Heritage and Global Cultural Heritage Governance — Sabine von Schorlemer 
  • Part 5. Cultural Heritage and Military Perspectives 
    • Introduction: Part 5 — James Cuno and Thomas G. Weiss 
    • 27. Protecting Cultural Heritage on the Battlefield: The Hard Case of Religion — Ron E. Hassner 
    • 28. From Kyoto to Baghdad to Tehran: Leadership, Law, and the Protection of Cultural Heritage — Scott D. Sagan 
    • 29. Practicing the Art of War While Protecting Cultural Heritage: A Military Perspective — Ruth Margolies Beitler and Dexter W. Dugan 
    • 30. Peace Operations and the Protection of Cultural Heritage — Richard Gowan 
    • 31. Protecting Cultural Property in Armed Conflict: The Necessity for Dialogue and Action Integrating the Heritage, Military, and Humanitarian Sectors — Peter G. Stone 
    • 32. When Peace Breaks Out: The Peril and Promise of “Afterwar” — Hugh Eakin 
  • Conclusion: Toward Research, Policy, and Action Agendas — James Cuno and Thomas G. Weiss 
  • Suggested Readings 
  • Contributors 
  • About 
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