Hi there! I'm a fellow museum studies student and classicist currently completing my undergrad. The issues of repatriation, museum ethics, and the Parthenon Marbles are of particular interest to me. I was wondering what advice you would give to someone in my position about graduate studies and entering the field? Thanks so much!!
So, for the issues of repatriation and museum ethics, I would start from the level of where you currently live and work your way up from there, because the laws might differ at each level. Contact local museums where you live and ask them if they have a Code of Ethics and if they allow people to view it (usually places would have it online for people to view/download as a PDF if they have one).
So, start with your town/city and check their laws about art and antiquities, then move to your state or province (or equivalent), then your country, and then move on to international law. It’s good to familiarize yourself with laws of places where you might be dealing with in the future depending on your expertise (e.g., Classicists should think about Greek and Italian laws, as well as lesser expected countries, such as Bulgaria, if your ancient artifacts come from or have come from these countries, etc.) So, I’ll give you some good starters for some of those things below:
For ethics, here are good places to start, with the American Alliance of Museums ethics page: https://www.aam-us.org/programs/ethics-standards-and-professional-practices/ethics/ and the International Council of Museums ethics page: https://icom.museum/en/activities/standards-guidelines/code-of-ethics/. Many museums follow both of these so it would be a good primer for you to familiarize yourself with these here.
For repatriation (if you’re from North America) of Native American and First Nations art, artifacts, and remains, I would suggest these sources to read and familiarize yourself with:
The Changing Presentation of the American Indian: Museums and Native Cultures: https://www.amazon.com/Changing-Presentation-American-Indian-Cultures/dp/0295984597/
Decolonizing Museums: Representing Native America in National and Tribal Museums (First Peoples, New Directions in Indigenous Studies): https://www.amazon.com/Decolonizing-Museums-Representing-Directions-Indigenous/dp/0807837156/
Plundered Skulls and Stolen Spirits: Inside the Fight to Reclaim Native America’s Culture: https://www.amazon.com/Plundered-Skulls-Stolen-Spirits-Americas/dp/022629899X/
Repatriation Reader: Who Owns American Indian Remains?: https://www.amazon.com/Repatriation-Reader-American-Indian-Remains/dp/0803282648/
Spirited Encounters: American Indians Protest Museum Policies and Practices: https://www.amazon.com/Spirited-Encounters-American-Policies-Practices/dp/0759110891
Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990: https://www.doi.gov/iacb/act
Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act site: https://www.nps.gov/nagpra/
And blog sites like this might help, too: Repatriation of Aboriginal Remains and Artifacts in Canada: https://culturalpropertylaw.wordpress.com/2010/09/13/repatriation-of-aboriginal-remains-and-artifacts-in-canada/
Books about Museums and Maori People:
Exhibiting Maori: A History of Colonial Cultures of Display: https://www.amazon.com/Exhibiting-Maori-History-Colonial-Cultures-dp-1845204751/dp/1845204751/
Museums and Maori: Heritage Professionals, Indigenous Collections, Current Practice: https://www.amazon.com/Museums-Maori-Professionals-Indigenous-Collections-ebook/dp/B01H5L2AFE/
General Links about International Law on Repatriation (more can be found by search):
http://www.artlaw.online/en/read-it/articles/repatriation-of-cultural-property-to-its-state-of-origin-as-international-customary-law
https://icom.museum/en/news/international-repatriation-of-human-remains-of-indigenous-peoples/
https://www.nps.gov/nagpra/special/international.htm
https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2015/01/21/when-should-antiquities-be-repatriated-to-their-country-of-origin/when-repatriation-is-clear-cut
For formal training about things like art law and repatriation in museums, here are some places for you to check out (including one MOOC):
FutureLearn MOOC: Antiquities Trafficking and Art Crime (University of Glasgow): https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/art-crime
You can take this for free but if you want the certificate, it costs money, but I think the course itself, content-wise, is worth the three weeks they give you
Institute of Art Law (UK): https://ial.uk.com/courses/
They have courses both for people with legal training as well as for people who are in fields relevant to art law but without legal training
They offer both distance and in-person training
LLM Art Law at the University of York: https://www.york.ac.uk/study/postgraduate-taught/courses/llm-art-law/
Master of Science in Art History: Collecting and Provenance in an International Context at the University of Glasgow: https://www.gla.ac.uk/postgraduate/taught/artcollectingprovenance/
This program is the only one I know of that focuses on artifact provenance by allowing you to focus on both law and art history at a graduate level
Postgraduate Certificate in Antiquities Trafficking and Art Crime at the University of Glasgow: https://online.gla.ac.uk/programme/university-of-glasgow-antiquities-trafficking-art-crime-1544700394205
Three required courses, all taken online, so you don’t have to be in Scotland for them
Two of the three required courses are optional courses for the MSc mentioned above
Additionally, there are some law schools in the United States that offer either a combination JD/MA in Art History or a certificate in Art and Museum Law or Heritage Studies (or related), found below:
Boston University: JD/MA in Preservation Studies: https://www.bu.edu/academics/law/programs/jdma-preservation/
Case Western Reserve University: The Dual JD/MA Degree Program in Law, Art History and Museum Studies: https://law.case.edu/Academics/Degrees/Dual-Degrees/JD-MA-Art-History-and-Museum-Studies
I looked at their available Art History/Museum courses and they have a good selection that would be relevant for Classicists!
DePaul University: JD with Certificate in Arts and Museum Law: https://law.depaul.edu/academics/jd-programs/certificates/Pages/arts-and-museum-law.aspx
University of Georgia: JD/Master of Historic Preservation: https://ced.uga.edu/degrees/mhp/mhp-other-degree-options/jd-mhp/
And for a general reference for museum law, I recommend this book, which can be difficult to get through, but is a must-have for museum professionals, imo: A Legal Primer on Managing Museum Collections: https://www.amazon.com/Legal-Primer-Managing-Museum-Collections/dp/1588343227
A few other books that might be relevant to your interests are here:
International Law, Museums and the Return of Cultural Objects: https://www.amazon.com/International-Museums-Return-Cultural-Objects/dp/0521732409/
Trafficking Culture: New Directions in Researching the Global Market in Illicit Antiquities: https://www.amazon.com/Trafficking-Culture-Transnational-Criminal-Cultural-dp-1138692492/dp/1138692492/
One of the authors (Donna Yates) of this book is the professor for the University of Glasgow Antiquities Trafficking and Art Crime PgCert mentioned above, so this book would be a good investment
The Center for Art Law blog site also has a good list of other possible places for course/training (some of which I have already mentioned): https://itsartlaw.com/art-law-resources/art-law-courses-and-programs-worldwide/
OKAY! So, now that I have possibly overwhelmed you with all the options (apologies if I didn’t give enough resources for your country, I wasn’t sure where you were, and I’m most familiar with academics in the U.S./U.K.). For consideration of what you might want to do in graduate school, you should consider what you’d like to focus on - for example, if you think law school is what you’re aiming for, you can figure out which program is best for you. If you want to go to graduate school for your specialty (like Classics or Museum Studies), see if you’d be able to take a couple courses about art law from the Law School and have it count towards your degree or see if your program has a course focused on law (my MA in Museum Studies had a law course because one of our professors had an LLM and she was a Native American History Ph.D. student, so it was full of good information about things like repatriation). If you can manage to go abroad for the degree, see what your options might be. A lot of artifact provenance is learned on the job, so the only place you’d get an official degree focused on it (unless my followers know of anywhere else) is at the University of Glasgow. I don’t know of any other program, certificate or otherwise, that gives you the training for artifact provenance. Check out Ph.D. programs, too, some universities (at least in the US) have JD/Ph.D. and Ph.D./MBA options, so if you were thinking of being a Curator with a trajectory to become a Director, I would suggest one of those programs.
A few more artifact provenance (and related) links that may be of use/interest to you, too:
Chasing Aphrodite: https://chasingaphrodite.com/
The EU Provenance Project: http://www.gridprovenance.org/
International Foundation for Art Research: https://www.ifar.org/provenance.php
I hope this helps, and let me know if you have any further questions or want me to expand/elaborate on anything!