1.
Ames, M. M. Why post-millennial museums will need fuzzy guerrillas. in Academic anthropology and the museum: back to the future (ed. Bouquet, M.) vol. New directions in anthropology 200–211 (Berghahn Books, 2001).
2.
Center for the Future of Museums. Museums & society 2034: trends and potential futures. (2008).
3.
Gardner, J. B. Ethical, entrepreneurial or inappropriate? Business practices in museums. in The Routledge companion to museum ethics: redefining ethics for the twenty-first-century museum (ed. Marstine, J.) (Routledge, 2011).
4.
Janes, R. R. The mindful museum. in Museums in a troubled world: renewal, irrelevance or collapse? vol. Museum meanings 147–168 (Routledge, 2009).
5.
Sandell, R. & Janes, R. R. Complexity and creativity in contemporary museum management. in Museum management and marketing (eds. Sandell, R. & Janes, R. R.) 1–14 (Routledge, 2007).
6.
Center for the Future of Museums. Demographic transformation and the future of museums. (2010).
7.
Beer, V. The problem and promise of museum goals. in Museum management (ed. Moore, K.) vol. Leicester readers in museum studies 31–40 (Routledge, 1994).
8.
Boardsource. The source: twelve principles of governance that power exceptional Boards. in Reinventing the museum: the evolving conversation on the paradigm shift (ed. Anderson, G.) (AltaMira Press, 2012).
9.
Chait, R. P., Ryan, W. P. & Taylor, B. E. Governance as leadership: bringing new governing mindsets to old challenges. in Reinventing the museum: the evolving conversation on the paradigm shift (ed. Anderson, G.) (AltaMira Press, 2012).
10.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport. Understanding the future: museums and 21st centuary life: a summary of responses. (2005).
11.
Dickenson, V. An inquiry into the relationship between museum boards and management. in Museum management (ed. Moore, K.) vol. Leicester readers in museum studies 95–114 (Routledge, 1994).
12.
Genoways, H. H. & Ireland, L. M. Strategic planning. in Museum administration: an introduction vol. American Association for State and Local History book series 75–90 (Altamira Press, 2003).
13.
Gray, C. Instrumental policies: causes, consequences, museums and galleries. Cultural Trends 17, 209–222 (2008).
14.
Janes, R. R. Museums in a troubled world: renewal, irrelevance or collapse? vol. Museum meanings (Routledge, 2009).
15.
Janes, R. R. Museums and the end of materialism. in The Routledge companion to museum ethics: redefining ethics for the twenty-first-century museum (ed. Marstine, J.) (Routledge, 2011).
16.
Lord, B. & Lord, G. D. Why: the objectives of museum management. in The manual of museum management 1–12 (AltaMira Press, 2009).
17.
Lord, B. & Lord, G. D. Who: the structure of museum organization. in The manual of museum management 13–52 (AltaMira Press, 2009).
18.
Lord, G. D. & Markert, K. Why conduct a strategic plan? in The manual of strategic planning for museums 1–15 (AltaMira Press, 2007).
19.
Lord, G. D. & Markert, K. Who: the structure of strategic planning. in The manual of strategic planning for museums 17–41 (AltaMira Press, 2007).
20.
Moore, K. Introduction: museum management. in Museum management (ed. Moore, K.) vol. Leicester readers in museum studies 1–14 (Routledge, 1994).
21.
Weil, S. E. & Cheit, E. F. The well-managed museum. in Museum management (ed. Moore, K.) vol. Leicester readers in museum studies 288–289 (Routledge, 1994).
22.
Gan, A. M., Voss, Z. G., Phillips, L., Anagnos, C. & Wade, A. D. The gender gap in art museum directorships.
23.
Malt, C. Museums, women and empowerment in the MENA countries. Museum International 59, 53–62 (2007).
24.
Griffin, D. & Abraham, M. The effective management of museums: cohesive leadership and visitor-focused public programming. Museum Management and Curatorship 18, 335–368 (2000).
25.
Schwarzer, M. Commentaries from the field. No heroes: revisiting the museum leadership crisis. in Museums and the paradox of change: a case study in urgent adaptation 246–257 (Routledge, 2013).
26.
Sheets, H. M. Study finds a gender gap at the top museums. New York Times (2014).
27.
Davies, S. W. Visionary leadership and missionary zeal. in Museum management and marketing (eds. Sandell, R. & Janes, R. R.) 252–271 (Routledge, 2007).
28.
Goler, R. I. Interim directorships in museums: their impact on individuals and significance to institutions. Museum Management and Curatorship 19, 385–402 (2001).
29.
Slaughter, A.-M. Why women still can’t have it all. The Atlantic (2012).
30.
Suchy, S. Emotional intelligence, passion and museum leadership. Museum Management and Curatorship 18, 57–71 (1999).
31.
Taylor, K. & Craig, T. L. Risking it: women as museum leaders. in Museum management (ed. Moore, K.) vol. Leicester readers in museum studies 265–273 (Routledge, 1994).
32.
Kotler, N. & Kotler, P. Can museums be all things to all people?: missions, goals, and marketing’s role. Museum Management and Curatorship 18, 271–287 (2000).
33.
Lin, Y.-N. Ethics and challenges of museum marketing. in Routledge companion to museum ethics: redefining ethics for the twenty-first-century museum / edited by Janet Marstine. (ed. Marstine, J.) 202–219 (Routledge, 2011).
34.
McLean, F. Future developments for marketing the museum. in Marketing the museum 215–224 (Routledge, 1997).
35.
Rentschler, R. Museum marketing: no longer a dirty word. in Museum marketing: competing in the global marketplace (eds. Rentschler, R. & Hede, A.-M.) 12–20 (Butterworth-Heinemann, 2007).
36.
Tobelem, J.-M. The marketing approach in museums. Museum Management and Curatorship 16, 337–354 (1997).
37.
Bradford, H. A new framework for museum marketing. in Museum management (ed. Moore, K.) vol. Leicester readers in museum studies 41–51 (Routledge, 1994).
38.
Cole, D. Museum marketing as a tool for survival and creativity: the mining museum perspective. Museum Management and Curatorship 23, 177–192 (2008).
39.
Doering, Z. D. Strangers, guests, or clients? Visitor experiences in museums. Curator: The Museum Journal 42, 74–87 (1999).
40.
Hede, A.-M. Branding museums in the global marketplace. in Museum marketing: competing in the global marketplace (eds. Rentschler, R. & Hede, A.-M.) 151–159 (Butterworth-Heinemann, 2007).
41.
Lang, C., J. Revee & V. Woollard (ed.). The responsive museum: working with audiences in the twenty-first century. (Ashgate, 2006).
42.
Lewis, P. Museums and marketing. in Museum management (ed. Moore, K.) vol. Leicester readers in museum studies 216–231 (Routledge, 1994).
43.
McLean, F. C. Marketing in museums: a contextual analysis. in Museum management (ed. Moore, K.) vol. Leicester readers in museum studies 232–248 (Routledge, 1994).
44.
Fiona McLean. Marketing the museum. (Routledge, 1997).
45.
McLean, F. & O’Neill, M. 'The social museum’ and its implications for marketing. in Museum marketing: competing in the global marketplace (eds. Rentschler, R. & Hede, A.-M.) 215–225 (Butterworth-Heinemann, 2007).
46.
Kawashima, N. Knowing the public. A review of museum marketing literature and research. Museum Management and Curatorship 17, 21–39 (1998).
47.
Komatsuka, C. M. Expanding the museum audience through visitor research. in Museum management and marketing (eds. Sandell, R. & Janes, R. R.) 367–376 (Routledge, 2007).
48.
Kotler, N. New ways of experiencing culture: the role of museums and marketing implications. Museum Management and Curatorship 19, 417–425 (2001).
49.
Kotler, N. G., Kotler, P. & Kotler, W. I. Museum marketing and strategy: designing missions, building audiences, generating revenue and resources. (Jossey-Bass, 2008).
50.
Martin, A. The impact of free entry to museums. Cultural Trends 12, 1–12 (2002).
51.
Rentschler, R. & Hede, A.-M. Museum marketing: competing in the global marketplace. (Butterworth-Heinemann, 2007).
52.
Rentschler, R. & Reussner, E. Museum marketing research: from denial to discovery? (2002).
53.
Rentschler, R. Museum marketing. Understanding different types of audiences. in Museum management and marketing (eds. Sandell, R. & Janes, R. R.) 345–367 (Routledge, 2007).
54.
Slater, A. Revisiting membership scheme typologies in museums and galleries. International Journal of Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Marketing 9, 238–260 (2004).
55.
Olins, W. A naming handbook. http://www.slideshare.net/WolffOlins/a-naming-handbook-from-wolff-olins (2014).
56.
State of Qatar. Law No. (14) of 2014 Promulgating the Cybercrime Prevention Law. (2014).
57.
Gibson, L. Piazzas or stadiums: toward an alternative account of museums in cultural and urban development. Advances in Research - Museum 1, 101–112 (2013).
58.
Friedman, R. Museum people: the special problems of personnel management in museums and historical agencies. in Museum management (ed. Moore, K.) vol. Leicester readers in museum studies 120–127 (Routledge, 1994).
59.
Genoways, H. H. & Ireland, L. M. Personnel management. in Museum administration: an introduction vol. American Association for State and Local History book series 161–173 (Altamira Press, 2003).
60.
Goodlad, S. & McIvor, S. Some principles of good practice in, and working documents for, the management of museum interpretation by volunteers. in Museum volunteers: good practice in the management of volunteers vol. The heritage 80–86 (Routledge, 1998).
61.
Holmes, K. Volunteers in the heritage sector: a neglected audience? International Journal of Heritage Studies 9, 341–355 (2003).
62.
Lord, B. & Lord, G. D. Who: the structure of museum organization. in The manual of museum management 13–52 (AltaMira Press, 2009).
63.
Sandell, R. The strategic significance of workforce diversity in museums. International Journal of Heritage Studies 6, 213–230 (2000).
64.
Davies, M. & Shaw, L. Diversifying the museum workforce: the Diversify scheme and its impact on participants’ careers. Museum Management and Curatorship 28, 172–192 (2013).
65.
Genoways, H. H. & Ireland, L. M. The working of museums. in Museum administration: an introduction vol. American Association for State and Local History book series 39–73 (Altamira Press, 2003).
66.
Gibson, L. Managing the people: art programs in the American Depression. The Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society 31, 279–292 (2002).
67.
Goodlad, S. & McIvor, S. Case studies of five exemplary programmes in Canada and the USA. in Museum volunteers: good practice in the management of volunteers vol. The heritage (Routledge, 1998).
68.
Goodlad, S. & McIvor, S. Pilot Volunteer programmes in the Science Museum (London). in Museum volunteers: good practice in the management of volunteers vol. The heritage (Routledge, 1998).
69.
Hardiman, R. M. C. Some more equal than others. in Museum management (ed. Moore, K.) vol. Leicester readers in museum studies 128–131 (Routledge, 1994).
70.
BBC News. Entertainment & Arts. Museums ‘ditching staff for volunteers’. (2013).
71.
Museum Practice. Volunteers. (2010).
72.
UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Preparing World Heritage nominations. (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, 2011).
73.
Lynn Meskell. UNESCO’s World Heritage Convention at 40. Current Anthropology 54, 483–494 (2013).
74.
Rao, K. A new paradigm for the identification, nomination and inscription of properties on the World Heritage List. International Journal of Heritage Studies 16, 161–172 (2010).
75.
UNESCO World Heritage Committee. The operational guidelines for the implementation of the World Heritage Convention.
76.
General Secretariat for Development Planning. Qatar National Vision 2030. (2008).
77.
McCarthy, K. F., Ondaatje, E. H., Zakaras, L. & Brooks, A. Gifts of the muse: reframing the debate about the benefits of the arts. (RAND Corporation, 2004).
78.
Ministry of Development Planning and Statistics. Culture and tourism statistics report, 2012 Doha, Qatar. (2014).
79.
Al-Kuwārī, A. K. The visions and strategies of the GCC countries from the perspective of reforms: the case of Qatar. Contemporary Arab Affairs 5, (2012).
80.
Exell, K. & Rico, T. ‘There is no heritage in Qatar’: orientalism, colonialism and other problematic histories. World Archaeology 45, 670–685 (2013).
81.
General Secretariat for Development Planning. Qatar National Development Strategy 2011 - 2016. Towards Qatar National Vision 2030. (2011).
82.
Morakabati, Y., Beavis, J. & Fletcher, J. Planning for a Qatar without oil: tourism and economic diversification, a battle of perceptions. Tourism Planning & Development 11, 415–434 (2014).
83.
Millar, S. Stakeholders and community participation. in Managing world heritage sites (eds. Leask, A. & Fyall, A.) 37–54 (Butterworth Heinemann, 2006).
84.
UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Managing cultural world heritage. (UNESCO, 2013).
85.
Qusayr ‘Amra site management plan. (2014).
86.
Christina Cameron. From Warsaw to Mostar: the World Heritage Committee and authenticity. APT Bulletin 39, 19–24 (2008).
87.
Feilden, B. M., Jokilehto, J., & International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and the Restoration of Cultural Property. Management guidelines for world cultural heritage sites. (ICCROM, 1993).
88.
Jokilehto, J. What is OUV? Defining the Outstanding Universal Value of Cultural World Heritage properties. (Hendrik Bäßler verlag).
89.
Leask, Anna & Fyall, Alan. Managing world heritage sites. (Butterworth Heinemann, 2006).
90.
Pedersen, A. Managing tourism at world heritage sites : a practical manual for world heritage site managers. (2002).
91.
Ringbeck, B. Management plans for World Heritage Sites: a practical guide. (UNESCO, 2008).
92.
Shackley, Myra L. Visitor management: case studies from world heritage sites. (Butterworth-Heinemann, 2000).
93.
Management planning for archaeological sites : an international workshop organized by the Getty Conservation Institute. (Getty Conservation Institute, 2002).
94.
UNESCO World Heritage Centre. The World Heritage Convention [1972]. http://whc.unesco.org/en/convention/.
95.
Dodd, J., Jones, C., Jolly, D. & Sandell, R. Disability reframed: challenging visitor perceptions in the museum. in Re-presenting disability: activism and agency in the museum 92–112 (Routledge, 2010).
96.
Sandell, R., Delin, A., Dodd, J. & Gay, J. Beggars, freaks and heroes? Museum collections and the hidden history of disability. Museum Management and Curatorship 20, 5–19 (2005).
97.
Sandell, R. & Dodd, J. Activist practice. in Re-presenting disability: activism and agency in the museum 3–22 (Routledge, 2010).
98.
Sandell, R. & Fraser, M. Outside the box: rethinking how museums present disability. The Guardian (2014).
99.
Rethinking disability representation in museums and galleries. (RCMG, University of Leicester, 2008).
100.
Re-presenting disability: activism and agency in the museum. (Routledge, 2010).
101.
Sandell, R., Delin, A., Dodd, J. & Gay, J. In the shadow of the Freakshow: the impact of Freakshow tradition on the display and understanding of disability history in museums. Disability Studies Quarterly 25, (2005).
102.
Ames, M. M. Introduction. Thirty-one propositions on changing museums: an introduction to the Glenbow case study. in Museums and the paradox of change: a case study in urgent adaptation 1–7 (Routledge, 2013).
103.
Fleming, D. Museums for social justice: managing organisational change. in Museums, equality and social justice (eds. Sandell, R. & Nightingale, E.) vol. Museum meanings 72–83 (Routledge, 2012).
104.
Janes, R. R. Embracing organizational change in museums: a work in progress. in Museum management and marketing (eds. Sandell, R. & Janes, R. R.) 67–81 (Routledge, 2007).
105.
Kotter, J. P. Leading change: why transformation efforts fail. in Reinventing the museum: the evolving conversation on the paradigm shift (ed. Anderson, G.) (AltaMira Press, 2013).
106.
Noble, N. Commentaries from the field. Museum of Vancouver: a transformation in progress. in Museums and the paradox of change: a case study in urgent adaptation (ed. Janes, R. R.) 226–234 (Routledge, 2013).
107.
Arnstein, S. R. A ladder of citizen participation. Journal of the American Institute of Planners 35, (1969).
108.
Robert R. Janes. Museums and the paradox of change: a case study in urgent adaptation. (Routledge, 2013).
109.
Bodo, S. The challenge of creating "third spaces”. Guidlines for MAP for ID pilot projects. in Museums as places for intercultural dialogue: selected practices from Europe (eds. Bodo, S., Gibbs, K. & Sani, M.) (MAP for ID Group, 2009).
110.
Clifford, J. Museums as contact zones. in Routes: travel and translation in the late twentieth century 188–219 (Harvard University Press, 1997).
111.
Museums and communities: curators, collectors and collaboration. (Berg, 2013).
112.
Grinell, K. When legitimate claims collide: communities, media and dialogue. Museum and society 9, (2011).
113.
Hebda, R. J. Museums, Climate Change and Sustainability. Museum Management and Curatorship 22, 329–336 (2007).
114.
Janes, R. R. Museums in a troubled world: renewal, irrelevance or collapse? vol. Museum meanings (Routledge, 2009).
115.
Koster, E. The Relevant Museum: a reflection on sustainability. in Reinventing the museum: the evolving conversation on the paradigm shift (ed. Anderson, G.) (AltaMira Press, 2012).
116.
Lynch, B. Whose cake is it anyway? A collaborative investigation into engagement and participation in 12 museums and galleries in the UK. (2011).
117.
Lynch, B. T. Custom-made reflective practice: can museums realise their capabilities in helping others realise theirs? Museum Management and Curatorship 26, 441–458 (2011).
118.
Lynch, B. T. Collaboration, contestation, and creative conflict: on the efficacy of museum / community partnerships. in The Routledge companion to museum ethics: redefining ethics for the twenty-first-century museum (ed. Marstine, J.) (Routledge, 2011).
119.
Lynch, B. T. & Alberti, S. J. M. M. Legacies of prejudice: racism, co-production and radical trust in the museum. Museum Management and Curatorship 25, 13–35 (2010).
120.
Lukes, S. Three-dimensional power. in Power: a radical view (Palgrave Macmillan, 2005).
121.
Merriman, N. Museum collections and sustainability. Cultural Trends 17, 3–21 (2008).
122.
Peacock, D. Making ways for change: museums, disruptive technologies and organisational change. Museum Management and Curatorship 23, 333–351 (2008).
123.
Peacock, D. Commentaries from the Field. Complexity, conversation and change: learning how museum organizations change. in Museums and the paradox of change : a case study in urgent adaptation / Robert R. Janes. 235–245 (Routledge, 2013).
124.
Semmel, M. L. Commentaries from the Field. Reflections on museums and change, 2012. in Museums and the paradox of change : a case study in urgent adaptation / Robert R. Janes. 258–269 (Routledge, 2013).
125.
Shatanawi, M. Engaging Islam: working with Muslim communities in a multicultural society. Curator: The Museum Journal 55, 65–79 (2012).
126.
Silverman, L. H. & O’Neill, M. Change and complexity in the 21st-century museum: the real relics in our museums may be the ways we think and work. in Reinventing the museum: the evolving conversation on the paradigm shift (ed. Anderson, G.) (AltaMira Press, 2012).
127.
Worts, D. Culture and museums in the winds of change: the need for cultural indicators. in Reinventing the museum: the evolving conversation on the paradigm shift (ed. Anderson, G.) (AltaMira Press, 2012).
128.
American Alliance of Museums. Center for the Future of Museums. http://www.aam-us.org/resources/center-for-the-future-of-museums.
129.
Merritt, E. Center for the Future of Museums [blog]. http://futureofmuseums.blogspot.co.uk/.
130.
Boylan, P. J. The concept of protection in times of armed conflict: from the crusades to the new millennium. in Illicit antiquities : the theft of culture and the extinction of archaeology (eds. Brodie, N. & Tubb, K. W.) 43–108 (Routledge, 2001).
131.
Mackenzie, S. & Green, P. Performative regulation: a case study in how powerful people avoid criminal labels. British Journal of Criminology 48, 138–153 (2007).
132.
O’Keefe, P. J. Codes of ethics: form and function in cultural heritage management. International journal of cultural property 7, 32–51 (1998).
133.
edited by Patrick J. O’Keefe and Lyndel V. Prott. Cultural heritage conventions and other instruments: a compendium with commentaries. (Institute Of Art And Law, 2011).
134.
Askerud, P. & Clément, E. Preventing the illicit traffic in cultural property: a resource handbook for the implementation of the 1970 UNESCO convention. (UNESCO, Division of Cultural Heritage, 1997).
135.
edited by Neil Brodie ... [et al.]. Archaeology, cultural heritage, and the antiquities trade. vol. Cultural heritage studies (University Press of Florida, 2006).
136.
Chamberlain, Kevin. War and cultural heritage: an analysis of the 1954 Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict and its two Protocols. (Institute of Art and Law, 2004).
137.
Forrest, C. International law and the protection of cultural heritage. (Routledge, 2010).
138.
Gerstenblith, P. Art, cultural heritage, and the law: cases and materials. vol. Carolina Academic Press law casebook series (Carolina Academic Press, 2008).
139.
Merryman, J. H., Elsen, A. E. & Urice, S. K. The international trade in art. in Law, ethics and the visual arts 113–205 (Kluwer Law International, 2007).
140.
Merryman, J. H., Elsen, A. E. & Urice, S. K. Who owns the past? in Law, ethics and the visual arts 217–338 (Kluwer Law International, 2007).
141.
Prott, L. V. & O’Keefe, P. J. Law and the cultural heritage. vol. 5 vols. (Professional, 1984).
142.
O’Keefe, P. J. Commentary on the UNESCO 1970 convention on illicit traffic. (Institute of Art and Law, 2000).
143.
O’Keefe, Patrick J. & Institute of Art and Law (Great Britain). Shipwrecked heritage: a commentary on the UNESCO Convention on Underwater Cultural Heritage. (Institute of Art and Law, 2002).
144.
edited by Patrick J. O’Keefe and Lyndel V. Prott. Cultural heritage conventions and other instruments: a compendium with commentaries. (Institute Of Art And Law, 2011).
145.
Prott, Lyndel V. & Institute of Art and Law (Great Britain). Commentary on the Unidroit Convention on stolen and illegally exported cultural objects 1995. (Institute of Art and Law, 1997).
146.
American Alliance of Museums. Code of ethics for museums. http://www.aam-us.org/resources/ethics-standards-and-best-practices/code-of-ethics (2000).
147.
Chasing Aphrodite: the hunt for looted antiquities in the world’s museums [blog]. http://chasingaphrodite.com/.
148.
Cultural Heritage Center (USA). http://eca.state.gov/cultural-heritage-center.
149.
Gill, D. Looting matters [blog]. http://lootingmatters.blogspot.com/.
150.
Lawyers’ Committee for Cultural Heritage Preservation (USA). http://www.culturalheritagelaw.org/.
151.
Illicit Antiquities Research Centre. Culture without context: Newsletter of the IARC.
152.
St. Hilaire, R. A. Cultural heritage lawyer Rick St. Hilaire [blog]. http://culturalheritagelawyer.blogspot.co.uk/.
153.
Saving Antiquities for Everyone (SAFE). http://www.savingantiquities.org/.
154.
University of Glasgow. Trafficking Culture. http://traffickingculture.org/.
155.
UNESCO. Convention on the means of prohibiting and preventing the illicit import, export and transfer of ownership of cultural property 1970. http://www.unesco.org/new/en/culture/themes/illicit-trafficking-of-cultural-property/1970-convention/text-of-the-convention/ (1970).
156.
UNIDROIT. Convention on stolen or illegally exported cultural objects. (1995).
157.
McAndrew, C. TEFAF art market report 2014: the global art market, with a focus on the US and China. (European Fine Art Foundation, 2014).
158.
Brodie, N., Doyle, J. & Watson, P. Stealing history : The illicit trade in cultural material. (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2000).
159.
Tubb, K. W. Extreme or commonplace: the collecting of unprovenanced antiquities. in Extreme collecting: challenging practices for 21st century museums (eds. Were, G. & King, J. C. H.) 57–74 (Berghahn Books, 2012).
160.
Atwood, Roger. Stealing history: tomb raiders, smugglers, and the looting of the ancient world. (St. Martin’s Griffin, 2004).
161.
Barkan, Elazar. The guilt of nations: restitution and negotiating historical injustices. (Norton, 2000).
162.
Claiming the stones naming the bones: cultural property and the negotiation of national and ethnic identity. (Getty Research Institute, 2002).
163.
Bator, P. M. An essay on the international trade in art. Stanford Law Review 34, (1982).
164.
Archaeology, cultural heritage, and the antiquities trade. vol. Cultural heritage studies (University Press of Florida, 2006).
165.
Trade in illicit antiquities: the destruction of the world’s archaeological heritage. (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2001).
166.
Illicit antiquities: the theft of culture and the extinction of archaeology. vol. One world archaeology (Routledge, 2002).
167.
Cuno, J. B. Who owns antiquity? : museums and the battle over our ancient heritage. (Princeton University Press, 2008).
168.
Felch, J. & Frammolino, R. Chasing Aphrodite: the hunt for looted antiquities at the world’s richest museum. (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011).
169.
Forrest, C. International law and the protection of cultural heritage. (Routledge, 2010).
170.
Greenfield, J. The return of cultural treasures. (Cambridge University Press, 2007).
171.
Goldberg, A. Reaffirming McClain: the National Stolen Property Act and the abiding trade in looted cultural objects. UCLA law review 53, 1031–1071 (2006).
172.
Jenkins, T. Contesting human remains in museum collections: the crisis of cultural authority. vol. Routledge studies in museum studies (Routledge, 2011).
173.
Mackenzie, S. R. M. Going, going, gone: regulating the market in illicit antiquities. (The Institute of Art and Law, 2005).
174.
Criminology and archaeology: studies in looted antiquities. vol. Oñati international series in law and society (Hart, 2009).
175.
Crime in the art and antiquities world: illegal trafficking in cultural property. (Springer, 2011).
176.
The Routledge handbook of archaeological human remains and legislation: an international guide to laws and practice in the excavation and treatment of archaeological human remains. (Routledge, 2010). doi:10.4324/9780203838716.
177.
The ethics of collecting cultural property: whose culture? whose property? (University of New Mexico Press, 1999).
178.
Imperialism, art and restitution. (Cambridge University Press, 2006).
179.
Merryman, J. H., Elsen, A. E. & Urice, S. K. Plunder, reparations and destruction. in Law, ethics and the visual arts 1–111 (Kluwer Law International, 2007).
180.
Merryman, J. H., Elsen, A. E. & Urice, S. K. The international trade in art. in Law, ethics and the visual arts 113–205 (Kluwer Law International, 2007).
181.
Merryman, J. H., Elsen, A. E. & Urice, S. K. Repatriation of cultural property. in Law, ethics and the visual arts 339–415 (Kluwer Law International, 2007).
182.
Merryman, J. H. Thinking about the Elgin marbles: critical essays on cultural property, art and law. (Kluwer Law International, 2000).
183.
Miles, M. M. Art as plunder: the ancient origins of debate about cultural property. (Cambridge University Press, 2008).
184.
Nicholas, L. H. The rape of Europa: the fate of Europe’s treasures in the Third Reich and the Second World War. (Macmillan, 1994).
185.
O’Keefe, R. The protection of cultural property in armed conflict. (Cambridge University Press, 2006).
186.
Witnesses to history: a compendium of documents and writings on the return of cultural objects. (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, 2009).
187.
Prott, L. V. & O’Keefe, P. J. Handbook of national regulations concerning the export of cultural property. (Unesco, 1988).
188.
Renfrew, C. Loot, legitimacy and ownership: the ethical crisis in archaeology. (Duckworth, 2000).
189.
Documents on the laws of war. (Oxford University Press, 2000).
190.
Who owns objects?: the ethics and politics of collecting cultural artefacts : proceedings of the first St. Cross-All Souls Seminar Series and Workshop, Oxford, October-December 2004. (Oxbow, 2006).
191.
Sandis, C. Two tales of one city: cultural understanding and the Parthenon sculptures. Museum Management and Curatorship 23, 5–21 (2008).
192.
Steiner, C. B. African art in transit. (Cambridge University Press, 1994).
193.
Toman, J. & Unesco. The protection of cultural property in the event of armed conflict: commentary on the Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict and its protocol, signed on 14 May, 1954 in the Hague, and on other instruments of international law concerning such protection. (Dartmouth Pub. Co, 1996).
194.
Antiquities: trade or betrayed: legal, ethical and conservation issues. (Archetype, 1995).
195.
Tubb, K. W. & Brodie, N. J. From museum to mantelpiece: the antiquities trade in the United Kingdom. in Destruction and conservation of cultural property vol. One world archaeology 102–116 (Routledge, 2001).
196.
The long way home: the meanings and values of repatriation. (Berghahn Books, 2010).
197.
Verhoeven, S. B. The art of war: protecting art in war. in Art & law (ed. Demarsin, B.) 376–413 (Die Keure Publishing Group, 2008).
198.
Archaeological ethics. (AltaMira Press, 2006).
199.
Vrdoljak, A. F. International law, museums and the return of cultural objects. (Cambridge University Press, 2006).
200.
Watson, P. & Todeschini, C. The Medici conspiracy: the illicit journey of looted antiquities, from Italy’s tomb raiders to the world’s greatest museums. (BBS PublicAffairs, 2006).
201.
Waxman, S. Loot: the battle over the stolen treasures of the ancient world. (Times Books, 2008).
202.
Extreme collecting: challenging practices for 21st century museums. (Berghahn, 2012).
203.
UNESCO. Convention for the protection of cultural property in the event of armed conflict [The Hague Convention]. http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=13637&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html (1954).
204.
UNESCO. Final report on damage assessment in Babylon. (2009).
205.
Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict with Regulations for the Execution of the Convention 1954. http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=13637&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html.
206.
Gazi, A. Exhibition ethics: an overview of major issues. Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies 12, (2014).
207.
Tubb, K. W. Shifting approaches to unprovenanced antiquities among conservators. in Realising cultural heritage law: festschrift for Patrick Joseph O’Keefe: [a collection of essays] (eds. Prott, L. V., Redmond-Cooper, R. & Urice, S. K.) 145–162 (Institute of Art and Law, 2013).
208.
Peter van Mensch. Museology and management: enemies or friends? Current tendencies in theoretical museology and museum management in Europe. in Museum management in the 21st century (ed. Mizushima, E.) (Museum Management Academy, 2004).
209.
International Council of Museums. ICOM code of ethics for museums. (2017).
210.
Museums Association (UK). Code of ethics for museums. http://www.museumsassociation.org/ethics/code-of-ethics.
211.
Coffee, K. Cultural inclusion, exclusion and the formative roles of museums. Museum Management and Curatorship 23, 261–279 (2008).
212.
Reimagining museums: practice in the Arabian Peninsula. (MuseumsEtc, 2013).
213.
Jenkins, T. Contesting human remains in museum collections: the crisis of cultural authority. (Routledge, 2011).
214.
Exhibiting cultures: the poetics and politics of museum display. (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1991).
215.
Kavanagh, G. Museum provision and professionalism. vol. Leicester readers in museum studies (Routledge, 1994).
216.
Lohman, J and Goodnow, K, eds. Human remains and museum practice. vol. Museums and diversity (Unesco, 2006).
217.
O’Neill, M. Museums, professionalism and democracy. Cultural Trends 17, 289–307 (2008).
218.
Schinkel, W. & Noordegraaf, M. Professionalism as symbolic capital: materials for a Bourdieusian theory of professionalism. Comparative Sociology 10, 67–96 (2011).
219.
The long way home: the meanings and values of repatriation. (Berghahn Books, 2010).
220.
Young, J. O. Cultural appropriation and the arts. (Blackwell Pub, 2008).
221.
Ethical issues in archaeology. (Altamira Press, 2003).
222.
Institute of Museum Ethics. http://museumethics.org/.