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- Q4743541 subject Q10140915.
- Q4743541 subject Q8185835.
- Q4743541 subject Q8508801.
- Q4743541 subject Q9051595.
- Q4743541 abstract "American Council for Cultural Policy (ACCP) was a not-for-profit organization formed in 2002 by a group of politically influential antiquities dealers, collectors and lawyers in the United States, with its headquarters in New York and representatives in Washington D.C.. The goal of the organization was described by Ashton Hawkins as "informing the public on arts issues." The organization is now defunct and its website (culturalpolicycouncil.org) has been removed from the web. Some of its members now actively take part in Cultural Policy Research Institute.The organization has been famous for its views on heritage issues and advocating the lawful circulation of antiquities in a regulated trade that balances the interests of national heritage, archeological preservation and the international interest in cultural exchange by museum loans and the private market. ACCP's treasurer William Pearlstein has described Middle Eastern cultural heritage laws (especially those of Iraq) as "retentionist" and expressed a desire for the possibility of circulation of licensed exported antiquities.Some Archaeologists, academics, and cultural heritage lawyers have found these statements worrisome, as the members of ACCP are politically influential figures. Archaeological Institute of America's code of ethics maintain that its members "refuse to participate in the trade in undocumented antiquities and refrain from activities that enhance the commercial value of such objects. Undocumented antiquities are those that are not documented as belonging to a public or private collection before December 30, 1970 when the AIA Council endorsed the UNESCO Convention on Cultural Property, or that have not been excavated and exported from the country of origin in accordance with the laws of that country." (Source: AIA official webpage) It is widely believed by many academics that the trade and collectorship of antiquities fuel the looting and destruction of archaeological sites around the world.".
- Q4743541 wikiPageExternalLink ev.php-URL_ID=13039&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html.
- Q4743541 wikiPageExternalLink www.archaeological.org.
- Q4743541 wikiPageExternalLink AIA_Code_of_EthicsA5S.pdf.
- Q4743541 wikiPageExternalLink www.cprinst.org.
- Q4743541 wikiPageExternalLink www.culturalpolicycouncil.org.
- Q4743541 wikiPageExternalLink showrev.cgi?path=241191143482611.
- Q4743541 wikiPageExternalLink 643.pdf.
- Q4743541 wikiPageExternalLink www.theartnewspaper.com.
- Q4743541 wikiPageExternalLink bahrani.
- Q4743541 wikiPageExternalLink page1.shtml.
- Q4743541 wikiPageWikiLink Q10140915.
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- Q4743541 wikiPageWikiLink Q35525.
- Q4743541 wikiPageWikiLink Q60.
- Q4743541 wikiPageWikiLink Q61.
- Q4743541 wikiPageWikiLink Q632218.
- Q4743541 wikiPageWikiLink Q8185835.
- Q4743541 wikiPageWikiLink Q8508801.
- Q4743541 wikiPageWikiLink Q9051595.
- Q4743541 comment "American Council for Cultural Policy (ACCP) was a not-for-profit organization formed in 2002 by a group of politically influential antiquities dealers, collectors and lawyers in the United States, with its headquarters in New York and representatives in Washington D.C.. The goal of the organization was described by Ashton Hawkins as "informing the public on arts issues." The organization is now defunct and its website (culturalpolicycouncil.org) has been removed from the web.".
- Q4743541 label "American Council for Cultural Policy".