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I'm at the beginning of training to be a lawyer and I'm really interested in this area of law but have no idea what lawyers who deal with this field are called. Any ideas?

2007-03-11 10:05:14 · 5 answers · asked by Manicbrit 3 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

5 answers

There are attorneys that do "art law" believe it or not. But government attorneys for the respective involved countries also have a hand in it.

2007-03-11 10:08:19 · answer #1 · answered by EthanHunt 3 · 2 0

worldwide human trafficking is happening. people who're committing the crimes must be caught and prosecuted. The victims would properly be from any nationality and the human trafficking is in any u . s . a .. i can not have confidence that some human beings right here say "deport them" like if that become the sufferer's decision, and that they did no longer point out to punish the persons who're doing the unlawful trafficking. ( That shows that their prejudice is going too far) victims are in lots of cases taken from their very own worldwide places via those people who're trafficking with them and take them to diverse places so as that they are able to't be discover via their families in the event that they have any.

2016-11-24 20:56:26 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Sorry I don't know either.

However recently I read about a number of high value art items that have "turned up" after many many years. A few paintings were stolen from a country house in the USA.... and many years later they were identified as stolen just before they went on auction at one of the big London Auction houses.

Spielberg recently was found to have purchased a painting which had been originally stolen. "Russian Classroom" or something.

Good luck with it... I would imagine that maybe there is legal departments with some firms which specialise in this field. However I suspect you will have to do your degree, LPC, training contract (in 4 seats) and then can choose your speciality.

2007-03-11 11:55:42 · answer #3 · answered by Narky 5 · 1 0

Well, it depends on whether you mean the criminal or civil sides of the arena.

A prosecutor would handle criminal convictions for violation of laws regulating trafficking in antiquities. But a prosecutor would do a lot more than that one area. Same with a defense attorney.

If you mean on the civil side of the field, you could get into licensing and transactional law, handing import licenses and contracts, or legislative counsel for those making the regulations, or any of a dozen other ways the law intersects with that topic.

2007-03-11 10:10:23 · answer #4 · answered by coragryph 7 · 2 0

If you have a museum in your city contact the curator and ask about this. I'm sure he/she can refer you to somebody who knows all about it.

2007-03-11 10:37:09 · answer #5 · answered by Yak Rider 7 · 0 1

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