Keywords
looted art; Washington Conference; Best Practices; provenance research; comparative models
Abstract
The restitution of Nazi-looted cultural and religious property remains an important aspect of providing a measure of justice for Holocaust victims and their heirs. The United States has played a leading role, from early postwar restitution efforts to shaping international principles, such as the Washington Conference Principles on Nazi-Confiscated Art (the “Washington Conference Principles”), the Terezin Declaration, and the recent Best Practices for the Washington Conference Principles. Yet restitution within the United States continues to rely largely on litigation, with varying outcomes and limited provenance research compared to some European countries. The following Essay examines America’s contributions and challenges and proposes a national restitution panel and independent, peer reviewed provenance research as constructive next steps to strengthen transparency, support claimants, and advance the commitments embodied in international principles.
Recommended Citation
Gideon Taylor and Ruth J. Weinberger,
Seeing the Humanity in Each Object: Finding Justice amid the Law,
94 Fordham L. Rev. 533
(2025).
Available at: https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/flr/vol94/iss2/9
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