Introduction: A Context for the Engagement of Criminology and Archaeology&SIMON MACKENZIE AND PENNY GREEN 1
Part Ⅰ: Criminology and the Market for Looted Antiquities 13
1. Whither Criminology in the Study of the Traffic in Illicit Antiquities?&KENNETH POLK 13
Part Ⅱ: Demand for Looted Antiquities 29
2. Antiquities, Forests, and Simmel's Sociology of Value&TONY WARD 29
3. Consensual Relations? Academic Involvement in the Illegal Trade in Ancient Manuscripts&NElL BRODIE 41
4. Border Controls in Market Countries as Disincentives to Antiquities Looting at Source? The US-Italy Bilateral Agreement 2001&GORDON LOBAY 59
Part Ⅲ: Supply of Looted Antiquities 83
5. The United Kingdom as a Source Country: Some Problems in Regulating the Market in UK Antiquities and the Challenge of the lnternet&ROGER BLAND 83
6. Crime Goes Underground: Crimes against Historical Sites and Remains in Sweden&LINDA KALLMAN AND LARS KORSELL 103
Part Ⅳ: Regulation and the Market in Looted Antiquities 127
7. The Paradox of Regulation: The Politics of Regulating Global Markets&DAVID WHYTE 127
8. Criminalising the Market in Illicit Antiquities: An Evaluation of the Dealing in Cultural Objects (Offences) Act 2003 in England and Wales&SIMON MACKENZIE AND PENNY GREEN 145
Index 171