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The Hague Convention of 1954: History, Significance and Compliances

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2011

Miguel Angel Corzo*
Affiliation:
The Getty Conservation Institute, 4503 Glencoe Avenue, Marina del Rey, California
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Abstract

The UNESCO Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict, signed at the Hague in 1954, is a document that reflects 20th century thinking on the means to safeguard the world's cultural heritage. It is our task to transform it into one that anticipates the challenges of the 21st century. First, then, we should pay homage to those individuals who had the spirit and the resolve to formulate the Convention and its Protocol. Second, we should admit that the Convention's effectiveness has been minimized in the past, largely due to a Euclidean conceptualization of the problem when in fact during war the axioms become spontaneously non-Euclidean, non-linear and highly chaotic. Clearly there is a need to reevaluate its premises in fresh ways, and to strengthen it in the context of the New Age that shall define the future.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1992

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