United States Department of State

International Cultural Property Protection
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About International Cultural Property Protection What Will I Find in the Cultural Property Web Site?
   
The United States Department of State is responsible for implementing the Convention on Cultural Property Implementation Act (the Act). This is the enabling legislation for the 1970 UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property. In accordance with the Act, United States Department of State accepts requests from countries for import restrictions on archaeological or ethnological artifacts, the pillage of which places their national cultural heritage in jeopardy. The Cultural Property Advisory Committee, appointed by the president of the United States, reviews these requests and makes recommendations to the United States Department of State. Under the president's authority, the State Department makes a decision with regard to the request and may enter into a cultural property agreement with the requesting country. The cultural property staff supports these functions and related activities and serves as a center of expertise on global cultural heritage protection issues.
  Smuggled Moche backflap siezed by the FBI and returned to Peru. Protecting Cultural Property

The problem of pillage, what's new, including a March committee meeting and two new image collections: Mali and El Salvador (updated 1/28/00), and recent reports of looting, theft, prosecution, and recovery on the World Wide Web (updated 11/8/99). To Report Smuggling: Call 1-800-BE-ALERT

 

Mayan Vessel from Guatemala The U.S. Response

U.S. implementation of the 1970 UNESCO Convention including an overview of the process, committee membership, text of  agreements, U.S. Customs import restrictions on certain categories of archaeological and ethnological materials, and illustrations of materials subject to import restriction.

Chart of Current and Expired Import Restrictions

 

Parthenon, Athens U.S. and International Laws
U.S. and international cultural property laws and conventions and links to U.S. and international law enforcement agencies and non-governmental organizations.
     

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Revised: January 28, 2000