[ in German ] The 2025 Guidelines promote dialogue with societies of origin and descendants, interdisciplinary provenance research, and proactive roles for museums, while they acknowledge the cultural, spiritual, and epistemological singularities of each case. They expand on communication channels for restitution requests, specifically notably requiring the consent of the state of origin, and call for a need to streamline procedures and call for an expert advisory body to be established to support restitution efforts. Further details on governance and the body’s specific mandate remain to be defined.
[ in German ] Identity politics, right-wing agitation, financial constraints, restitution: museums and exhibition venues are now under pressure in many ways. A status report. Has the post-restitution era began?
The Franco-German Fund for Provenance Research on cultural belonging from Sub-Saharan Africa has announced the funding of networking and parthership initiatives aimed at fostering the creation of international research teams and strengthening existing partnerships between Germany, France, and Sub-Saharan Africa.
[ in German ] Provenance research is becoming increasingly digital: be it in the cataloguing of source material, in the use of the numerous existing databases for research or in the visual analysis of research data.
Open Restitution Africa is undertaking a large-scale research project to map past and current restitution undertakings for belongings (material heritage) and human ancestors from the African continent. Deadline 14 March 2025.