March 26–27, 2004, in St. Louis, Missouri, the Washington
University School of Law's Whitney R. Harris Institute for Global
Legal Studies and the School of Art hosted the Imperialism, Art and
Restitution Conference. The conference brought together many of the
world's leading experts on art and antiquities law, museum policy,
and the larger cultural context surrounding these fields. The conference
organizers chose several particularly controversial case studies to
generate debate and discussion around the issues of whether Western states
and their museums should return major works of art and antiquities,
acquired during the Age of Imperialism, to the countries of origin. The
case studies included the Elgin/Parthenon Marbles, the Bust of
Nefertiti, and objects protected by the Native American Graves Protection
and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). The format produced a lively,
interdisciplinary, and sometimes passionate debate that helped crystallize
issues and expose complexities but certainly produced no consensus around
a simple solution of return or retain.