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Showing posts with label Saskia Hufnagel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saskia Hufnagel. Show all posts

December 28, 2025

Interview with Professor Saskia Hufnagel: Cultural Heritage Law, Art Crime, and the ARCA Experience

As part of ARCA’s ongoing effort to give prospective participants a deeper look behind the scenes of our Postgraduate Certificate Programmes in Art Crime and Cultural Heritage Protection, Edgar Tijhuis* speaks with our faculty members about their work, their motivations, and the unique learning environment we create each summer in Italy.

This series aims to offer future participants a personal glimpse into the people who teach with ARCA, the community around it, and what to expect in the coming year.

ARCA professor Saskia Hufnagel
Saskia Hufnagel
To begin, could you tell us a bit about yourself?

I started off as a German Criminal Lawyer in a little town close to the Dutch border and had nothing to do with art at all. In my practice I got very interested in cross-border crime and law enforcement dealing with it and was very lucky to receive a scholarship funded jointly by the European Commission and the Australian National University to pursue a PhD in the area of international law enforcement cooperation. 

After my PhD I spent some time as a researcher in Queensland and one of my PhD examiners who had regularly participated in ARCA events, Prof Duncan Chappell, encouraged me to write with him on the Beltracci case.
That was my first time at ARCA in 2011 and I loved both the research and the people very much. So much so, that I decided to combine my research areas of policing and transnational crime with art and antiquities and to establish myself in this new research field. 

I then moved to Queen Mary University of London to teach criminal law, policing and comparative criminal justice, but kept working with Prof Duncan Chappell. In 2016 we were awarded an AHRC Network Grant and started bringing people together who worked on art crime all over the world, including many from the ARCA community. In 2023 I was offered a Professorship in Australia and am now teaching and researching at the University of Sydney Law School. I am still fascinated by art crime and am researching and writing on it, in particular on art and money laundering. 

In 2024 Lynda Albertson and Edgar Tijhuis asked me to teach on the ARCA programme and I was absolutely delighted to do so. Teaching on the programme is a wonderful experience and for me the highlight of the year!

You have been part of ARCA’s community for some time. Have attended the annual Amelia Art Crime Conference? 

In the past 14 years, I have only missed two ARCA conferences and the time in Amelia each year is extremely important for my research as it is inspiring and envigorating, creating new contacts with wonderful people in the field and bringing me up to date with the newest research. There are so many memorable moments from these conferences, but the first conference I attended was really the one that changed my career, inspired me to keep working in the field and initiated friendships that have lasted now for many years (though new ones can be added to the list each year!).

From your perspective, what makes ARCA’s Postgraduate Certificate Program truly unique and valuable?

There is no other program like ARCA. University programs will situate a course mainly within one discipline, so you rarely get the same variety of interdisciplinary knowledge taught within this program elsewhere. Also, ARCA has contacts to some of the most knowledgeable academics and practitioners in the field and brings them together from all around the world to teach the programme.

How does the location in Italy — surrounded by centuries of cultural heritage — enhance the learning experience for participants?

The vibe of the location is very conducive to learning about art and antiquity crime. You see the tomb raiders hang out around the Etruscan tombs that you will be visiting and the taught becomes real. The threat to culture and the importance of preserving it are felt as particularly pressing in this environment. The beauty of the nature and the quality of food and wine obviously also help to bring the student community together and make it an unforgettable experience.

Are there particular site visits or practical elements during your course that you find especially valuable?

My course is pretty dull as law is often not that exciting and I am teaching the law around cultural heritage and the basics of criminal law, property law and international law. I try to make up for the technicalities by using a fair amount of pictures in my slides and doing very interactive classes where students learn by asking questions and engaging with me rather than by having to listen to me droning on about the law. There will still be a bit of that, but I try to keep it as ‘fun’ as possible.

As we look toward the 2026 program, which developments or emerging issues in the field of art crime do you consider particularly important, and how will these be reflected in your course?

2025 was obviously dominated by the Louvre heist and there is a lot one can learn from this case in terms of criminal law, but also international law and policing. This is obviously just one case and many other events have marjorly impacted cultural property protection in recent years, such as the wars in Ukraine and other parts of the world, making us think about import and export bans and how to enforce them. We will use current examples to explain the law and think about the complexity of the law. How many criminal offence were, for example, committed during the Louvre heist?

What key skills, perspectives, or tools do you hope participants will gain from your course? In what ways can they apply these insights in their professional or academic paths?

The law around cultural heritage/property is important for all areas of art crime research. I hope that students get an understanding of the basics of the law surrounding it to be able to understand, for example, why some moral obligations might not be legal obligations and to see the legal restraints around restitution as well as civil and criminal trials more generally. An understanding of the law is important whether you are a police officer or a gallerist. It sets the parameters within which eiter can move and do business and should be of interest to everyone.

If someone is considering applying to ARCA’s 2026 program, what advice would you give them? And why do you think now is a meaningful moment to engage with this field?

Amelia is a once in a lifetime opportunity to study with a very diverse group of students, people you would otherwise never – or not very likely – meet in your life. Make friends, support each other studying, have fun, enjoy the wide variety of teachers and subjects and take home a great deal of knowledge and a new little family. Art and antiquities crime is a very important field of research but still not many people know about it. Your mission is to change this and get the knowledge you gain at ARCA out into the world. Make people care.



About Saskia Hufnagel

Dr Saskia Hufnagel is a Professor at the University of Sydney Law School. Her research focuses on art crime, transnational and comparative criminal justice and global law enforcement cooperation. Her particular interests are the detection, investigation and prosecution of art crimes in the UK, Germany and Australia from a comparative legal perspective and international and regional legal patterns of cross-border policing. Saskia is a qualified German legal professional and accredited specialist in criminal law. She holds an LL.B. from the University of Trier and an LL.M. as well as a PhD from the Australian National University. 

After completing her PhD she worked at the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security, Griffith University, Australia, and was a Leverhulme Fellow at the University of Leeds. Before joining the University of Sydney she worked for nine years at Queen Mary University of London, teaching ‘Criminal Law’, ‘Art, Business and Law’, ‘Policing’ and ‘Comparative Criminal Justice’. Her publications in the field of art crime include the “Palgrave Handbook of Art Crime” (S. Hufnagel and D. Chappell, eds.) (Palgrave Macmillan, 2019); ‘Anti-Money Laundering Regulation and the Art Market’ (with Colin King) (2020) 40(1) Legal Studies and many other edited collections, articles and book chapters.


* Dr Edgar Tijhuis is Academic Director at ARCA and is responsible for coordinating ARCA’s postgraduate certificate programmes. Since 2009, he has also taught criminology modules within ARCA's PG Certificate programmes.

March 3, 2025

Dr. Saskia Hufnagel is teaching with ARCA this summer


This year, ARCA’s Post Lauream I on Art and Antiquities Crime will be held from 23 May through 20 July 2025, followed by ARCA’s Post Lauream II in Acquisition & Interpretation of Cultural Property. Both programs can be taken separately or together and are held in the beautiful heart of Umbria in Amelia, Italy. 

In the months leading up to the start of the programmes, this year’s lecturers are being interviewed about their courses and teaching with ARCA in Italy.  In this interview we meet Dr. Saskia Hufnagel, a Visiting Professor at Queen Mary, a Professor at the University of Sydney Law School and Co-Director of the Sydney Institute of Criminology. Her research concerns global law enforcement cooperation, transnational and comparative criminal justice and art crime. She lectures on the Art, Business and Law LLM (CCLS).  Her particular interests are international and regional legal patterns of cross-border policing as well as the detection, investigation and prosecution of art crimes in the UK, Germany and Australia. Saskia is a qualified German legal professional and accredited specialist in criminal law.

Can you tell us something about your background?

I started off as a German Criminal Lawyer in a little town close to the Dutch border and in my practice I got very interested in cross-border crime and law enforcement dealing with it.  As luck would have it, I received a scholarship funded jointly by the European Commission and the Australian National University to pursue a PhD in the area of international law enforcement cooperation.  After my PhD, I spent some time as a researcher in Queensland and then moved to Queen Mary University of London to teach criminal law, policing, and comparative criminal justice.  In 2023 I was offered a Professorship in Australia and am now teaching and researching at the University of Sydney Law School.

And how did you get involved with ARCA? 

After I had finished my PhD, one of my examiners, Prof Duncan Chappell, asked me whether I would write with him about a German forger's case (Beltracchi) that also included international law enforcement challenges and, at the time, a lot of the reports on it were mainly available in German.  This is how I got into art crime and visited ARCA for the first time in 2011.  

It was such a great multidisciplinary hub for art crime research and it was so exciting to be exchanging ideas with both academics and practitioners specialising in fields much more interesting than my own, such as archaeology, art history, criminology, economics, forensic sciences and countless others.  People were so friendly and welcoming and happy to work even with boring lawyers that in the past 14 years, I only missed two of the conferences.

What is the purpose of the course you are teaching this summer?

My part of the teaching is a necessary evil as knowing the legal foundations of cultural heritage law is really important for many areas of art crime research.  I will go through the international legal set up of cultural property protection with students, discuss the differences between such protection in times of war and peace, look at the protection of moveable and immoveable cultural heritage and go through some basics of criminal law comparatively between various jurisdictions to highlight criminal law issues in relation to fraud, theft, vandalism, money laundering, tax-, import- and export-offences and many other crimes.

What is it like in Amelia?

Amelia is like a picture book Italian village with wonderful restaurants, bars and shops. The people are very friendly and forgiving with silly foreigners like me who do not speak a word of Italian. The longer you stay in Amelia, the more you will love it!

What is so special about this program?

There is no other program like ARCA.  University programs will situate a course mainly within one discipline, so you rarely get the same variety of interdisciplinary knowledge taught within this program elsewhere.  Also, ARCA has contacts to some of the most knowledgeable academics and practitioners in the field and brings them together from all around the world to teach the programme.

Which course would you like to follow yourself?

I would love to do Lynda Albertson’s course and discover more about data sets and data interpretation and how to harness art crime databases! Students were always gushing about it and telling me about all the possibilities for research they discovered in her course. It made me so jealous!

Any advice for the participants that come to Amelia?

Work hard and play hard! Amelia is a once in a lifetime opportunity to study with a very diverse group of students, people you would otherwise never – or not very likely – meet in your life. Make friends, support each other studying, have fun, enjoy the wide variety of teachers and subjects and take home a great deal of knowledge and a new little family.

In closing I would add that Dr. Hufnagel has co-edited a marvellous book in the field titled The Palgrave Handbook on Art Crime featuring articles from many people working in this important field.  If you would like to learn with her directly, there is still time to apply for the ARCA program and speak with her directly this summer. 

By:  Edgar Tijhuis

December 8, 2016

Conference - Second AHRC Workshop | Art, Crime and Criminals: Art, Crime and Criminals: Painting Fresh Pictures of Art Theft, Fraud and Plunder


Organised by: Professor Duncan Chappell,  Dr. Saskia Hufnagel and Ms. Marissa Marjos.

Date: January 16, 2017

Location: Royal United Services Institute for Defence & Security Studies (RUSI)
61 Whitehall
London, United Kingdom

Workshop Fees: None, but registration is required 

Following the success of the first workshop, this second workshop aims specifically at discussions in the area of art fraud and forgeries. The following (third) workshop will focus on looting and iconoclasm (September 2017, Berlin, Ministry of Finance). 

All workshops will be structured around a number of presentations by prominent actors in the field, but the main parts are discussions around the topic between all participants.   

The aim of the workshop series is to encourage interdisciplinary research, cross-jurisdictional sharing of knowledge and exchange of ideas between academics, practitioners and policy makers. Practitioners will be invited from various backgrounds, such as, police, customs, museums, galleries, auction houses, dealerships, insurance companies, art authenticators, forensic scientists, private security companies etc.  

The proposed network not only aims at bringing the different players together, but also establishes a communication platform that will ensure their engagement beyond the three workshops. Organisations invited to the 2nd workshop include: The Association for Research into Crimes against Art (ARCA), Metropolitan Police, German Police (LKA Berlin), Hong Kong Police, Europol, Authenticators and Art Experts, The Art Loss Register, Art Recovery International, Private Policing Sector, Victoria and Albert Museum (Security), National Gallery, Historic England, Artists/Forgers, Insurance Sector, Journalists, Association of Chiefs of Police, MPs, Academics from various disciplines, Art Dealers and many more.

Workshop 2 will focus specifically on the subject area of art fraud and forgery. In an international art market that is currently reaching record levels of pricing and unprecedented levels of speculative sales and investment the incentives for art fraud and forgery have never been higher. Among questions to be addressed will be:

  1. What is the prevalence of this type of crime?
  2. Who are the principal participants?
  3. To what extent are existing regulatory mechanisms effective?
  4. Is self-regulation of the art market the way forward?
  5. How are forgeries placed on the market?
  6. What scientific measures can be taken to better protect the art market?
  7. How should identified fraudulent works of art be dealt with?
  8. How can the legal and financial risks in authenticating works of art be mitigated?

Workshop Schedule

9.00 am Registration

9.30 am – 10.00 am

  • Introduction by Duncan Chappell and Saskia Hufnagel
10:00am – 11.30 am
1. International Case Studies

  • Dr. Noah Charney, founder, Association for Research into Crimes against Art (ARCA)
  • Rene Allonge – Detective Chief Superintendent, Criminal Investigation Office (State of Berlin) and Steven Weigel – Detective Superintendent, Criminal Investigation Office (State of Berlin)
  • Saskia Hufnagel, QMUL

Coffee Break 11.30 am – 12.00 pm

12.00 pm – 1.00 pm

  • Presentation by and Dialogue with John Myatt

1.00pm - 2.00 pm Lunch

2.00 pm – 3.30 pm
2. International Law Enforcement and Security Perspectives

  • Vernon Rapley, Head of Security and Visitor Services at the Victoria & Albert Museum
  • Toby Bull, Senior Inspector, Hong Kong Police
  • Michael Will, Europol

3.30 pm – 4.00 pm Afternoon Tea

4.00 pm – 6.00 pm
3. Detection, Prosecution and other legal action

  • Professor Robyn Sloggett, Director, Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation, University of Melbourne
  • James Ratcliffe, Art Loss Register
  • Robert A. Kugler – Barrister/Solicitor (Rechtsanwalt), Höly, Rauch & Partner - Lawyers, Berlin

Presentations from the first workshop can be found on the Queen Mary University website via the link here.

November 9, 2016

Conference - Second AHRC Workshop | Art, Crime and Criminals: Art, Crime and Criminals: Painting Fresh Pictures of Art Theft, Fraud and Plunder


Organised by Professor Duncan Chappell,  Dr Saskia Hufnagel and Ms Marissa Marjos.

Date: January 16, 2017

Workshop costs: Free, registration required 

Following the success of the first workshop, this second workshop aims specifically at discussions in the area of art fraud and forgeries. The following (third) workshop will focus on looting and iconoclasm (June 2017, Berlin, Ministry of Finance). 

All workshops will be structured around a number of presentations by prominent actors in the field, but the main parts are discussions around the topic between all participants.   

The aim of the workshop series is to encourage interdisciplinary research, cross-jurisdictional sharing of knowledge and exchange of ideas between academics, practitioners and policy makers. Practitioners will be invited from various backgrounds, such as, police, customs, museums, galleries, auction houses, dealerships, insurance companies, art authenticators, forensic scientists, private security companies etc.  

The proposed network not only aims at bringing the different players together, but also establishes a communication platform that will ensure their engagement beyond the three workshops.  Organisations invited to the 2nd workshop include:

The Association for Research into Crimes against Art (ARCA), Metropolitan Police, German Police (LKA Berlin), Hong Kong Police, Europol, Authenticators and Art Experts, The Art Loss Register, Art Recovery International, Private Policing Sector, Victoria and Albert Museum (Security), National Gallery, Historic England, Artists/Forgers, Insurance Sector, Journalists, Association of Chiefs of Police, MPs, Academics from various disciplines, Art Dealers and many more. 

Workshop 2 will focus specifically on the subject area of art fraud and forgery. In an international art market that is currently reaching record levels of pricing and unprecedented levels of speculative sales and investment the incentives for art fraud and forgery have never been higher. Among questions to be addressed will be: 

1.What is the prevalence of this type of crime? 

2.Who are the principal participants? 

3.To what extent are existing regulatory mechanisms effective? 

4.Is self-regulation of the art market the way forward? 

5.How are forgeries placed on the market? 

6.What scientific measures can be taken to better protect the art market? 

7.How should identified fraudulent works of art be dealt with? 

8.How can the legal and financial risks in authenticating works of art be mitigated? 

9.00 am Registration

9.30 am – 10.00 am
Introduction by Duncan Chappell and Saskia Hufnagel

10:00am – 11.30 am
1.           International Case Studies 
Dr. Noah Charney, founder, Association for Research into Crimes against Art (ARCA)

Rene Allonge – Detective Chief Superintendent, Criminal Investigation Office (State of Berlin) and Seven Weigel – Detective Superintendent, Criminal Investigation Office (State of Berlin)

Saskia Hufnagel, QMUL

Coffee Break 11.30 am – 12.00 pm
12.00 pm – 1.00 pm
Presentation by and Dialogue with John Myatt

1.00pm - 2.00 pm Lunch

Afternoon
2.00 pm – 3.30 pm
2.          International Law Enforcement and Security Perspectives
 Vernon Rapley, Head of Security and Visitor Services at the Victoria & Albert Museum

Toby Bull, Founder, TrackArt - Art Risk Consultancy

Michael Will, Europol

3.30 pm – 4.00 pm Afternoon Tea

4.00 pm – 6.00 pm

3.        Detection, Prosecution and other legal action
Professor Robyn Sloggett, Director, Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation, University of Melbourne

James Ratcliffe, Art Loss Register

National Gallery

Robert A. Kugler – Barrister/Solicitor (Rechtsanwalt), Höly, Rauch & Partner - Lawyers, Berlin

Presentations from the first workshop can be found on the Queen Mary University website via the link here.