M.A. Bakunin and the Liminality of the Concept of Cultural Property Protection during Armed Conflicts
Annotation
The protection of cultural property during armed conflicts, although not a new social problem, is still the focus of close attention in the doctrine and practice of international law. In modern international law, infringement of cultural property can be understood as the intentional seizure, appropriation, destruction, as well as other forms of destruction, damage to objects and items protected in accordance with the Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property committed during armed conflicts of an international and non-international nature. armed conflict in 1954. The formation of a normative mechanism for the protection of such values in international law occurred in the twentieth century after the world wars, but this process was preceded by numerous armed conflicts and facilitated by ideological inspirers. It is the contribution of the latter to the formation of a system for the protection of cultural property that this study is devoted to.
Keywords
| Type | Article |
| Information | Law Between East and West № 03/2024 |
| Pages | 29-38 |
