The program will begin with Diane
Penneys Edelman, Villanova University School of Law; President, Lawyers’
Committee for Cultural Heritage Preservation; Leila
Amineddoleh, Adjunct Professor of Law, Fordham Law School; Executive Director,
Lawyers’ Committee for Cultural Heritage Preservation; and Irina
Tarsis, Chair, American Society of International Law Cultural Heritage &
the Arts Interest Group.
The first panel, Monuments Officers, the Roberts
Commission, Rose Valland, Ardelia Hall, the protection of monuments in Europe and
Asia during WWII, law governing the “Spoils of War Doctrine,” legacy issues for
museums and the art market, will be chaired by Thomas R. Kline, Of Counsel, Andrews Kurth, LLP; Assistant Professorial
Lecturer, George Washington University, Museum Studies. Speakers: Elizabeth
Hudson, Chief Researcher, Monuments Men Foundation; Marc
Masurovsky, Independent Historian and Author and formerly with U.S. Holocaust
Memorial Museum; Anne
Rothfeld, Independent Historian, Ph.D. Candidate, American University; and Victoria
Reed, Curator for Provenance, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
The second panel, Prevention efforts in problem areas
since WWII: Evolution of U.S. law, policy and practice concerning looting
prevention and restitution efforts in post-WWII conflicts, will be chaired by Lucille Roussin, Founder and Director, Holocaust Restitution and Claims Practicum, and Adjunct Professor of Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law. Speakers: Richard
B. Jackson, Special Assistant to the Army Judge Advocate General for Law of War
Matters; Salam
al-Kuntar, Visiting Assistant Professor, University of Pennsylvania Department
of Anthropology; James
McAndrew, Forensic Specialist, Grunfeld, Desiderio, Lebowitz, Silverman &
Klestadt.
Lunchtime Conversation with Lynn H. Nicholas, Independent Researcher and Author, The Rape of Europa: 12:15-1:30p.m. Interview by Thomas Kline.
The third panel, Present-day initiatives taken by the US
armed forces, law enforcement, the art market and others to prevent and remedy
looting and the trade of works looted during times of conflict, as well as law
governing trade in looted objects, will be chaired by Chair:
Elizabeth Varner, Executive Director, National Art Museum of Sport. Speakers: Corine Wegener, Preservation Specialist for Cultural
Heritage, Smithsonian Institution; Laurie W. Rush, Anthropologist and Cultural Resources
Manager, United States Army; Thomas
Mulhall, Supervisory Special Agent, Department of Homeland Security (ICE); Monica
Dugot, Senior Vice President, International Director of Restitution, Christie’s.
The fourth panel, The use of the Internet, social media, television, news
industry and film to raise awareness of looting, theft, and cultural heritage
issues. A discussion about alternative channels used to reduce cultural
heritage loss and increase restitution, will be chaired by Ms. Amineddoleh. Speakers: Darius
Arya, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder, American Institute for Culture; Jason
Felch, Reporter, Los Angeles Times; Co-Author, Chasing Aphrodite; David
D’Arcy, Correspondent, The Art Newspaper; Screenwriter/Producer, Portrait of Wally.
Afterword
by Robert Edsel, Author and President, Monuments Men Foundation, WWII Monuments Men to the Present: What
have we learned? What do we need to relearn? Introduction
by Thomas R. Kline.