Abstract
As UNESCO commemorates the founding of ICCROM, this article looks at the effects of conservation practices on building an international ethical framework for protecting the cultural heritage. Starting from the conditions in which ICCROM was created, it reviews the role of non‐European countries in particular in creating the international programme for the conservation of heritage. It also emphasizes the importance for the future of an analysis that considers both normative and deontological instruments and practical ways of protecting heritage.
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