Resource theme: Traffic of works of art, antiques, ancient documents and natural specimens Looting of archaeological objects Resource type: Bibliography - Reports Author: NI CHONAILL Siobhan, REDING Anaïs, VALERI LorenzoEditor: Rand EuropeDate: 2011Pages / Length: 48 p.Language of publication: EnglishThe aim of this research is to explore new ways of curtailing the illegal trade in cultural property. Despite a range of legislative and policy interventions, the trade in illicit art and antiquities continues to flourish, resulting in damage to the arts, scholarship and heritage. Through an exploration of existing intervention tools, two case studies and a set of key informant interviews, this study demonstrates the existing difficulties in curtailing the market in cultural property and explores the potential for new policy interventions. More specifically, we map the supply chain for the illegal trade in cultural property and explore the failures of current policy interventions through two case studies, the Medici trading cartel and the Beit collection robberies. On this basis, we prioritise policy interventions to contain the illegal trade in cultural property according to the applicable stage of the supply chain phase (supply, transfer or demand) and the associated priority level (low, medium or high). International Download Ni_Chonaill_Assessing_Illegal_Trade.pdf