@article{018e57a7-c2e7-711a-aa1a-e199afa7f929, author = {Karolina Kuprecht}, title = {Colonial Loot and Its Restitution – Country Report: Switzerland}, journal = {Santander Art and Culture Law Review}, volume = {2022}, number = {2/2022 (8)}, year = {2022}, issn = {2391-7997}, pages = {457-472},keywords = {Switzerland; museum; colonial; provenance research; restitution}, abstract = {In Switzerland, the decolonization of ethnological and historical museums and collections is in progress. This is true in practice, especially by federally funded provenance research projects and by single restitutions of human remains and colonial objects. However, provenance research and its goals need to be better understood in Switzerland, and the reluctance towards restitution is still high. There are no regulations or guidelines that would support the decolonization activities and supplement existing cultural heritage law. In practice and by regulation, the goal to strive for should be to implement the international human rights of Indigenous peoples to control or restitute their cultural heritage.}, doi = {10.4467/2450050XSNR.22.030.17043}, url = {https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/saaclr/article/colonial-loot-and-its-restitution-country-report-switzerland} }