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  • Contested Heritage - Removing Art from Land and Historic Buildings

Contested Heritage - Removing Art from Land and Historic Buildings

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Statues, sculpture and paintings may be part of buildings or land. If so, property ownership is made more complex. Removing such works might require a planning or heritage consent. These issues are important for the art market and of wider public interest in the debate over contested heritage. It includes: Property law on ownership, conversion of goods and sale The working of listed building consent, planning permission, scheduled monument consent and conservation area, The meaning of 'building', 'fixed' and 'curtilage' Full analysis of the Supreme Court's decision in Dill v Secretary of State [2020] UKSC 20 The recent changes in law and policy on contested heritage Changing street names and moving church treasures Full coverage of the law and policy in England, Wales and Northern Ireland This book will be of interest to art lawyers, planning, property and private client lawyers dealing with heritage, planning and heritage consultants, conservation students and art law students. ABOUT THE AUTHORS Richard Harwood OBE QC specialises in planning, environmental, public and art law at 39 Essex Chambers. In particular he acts for art owners, regulators and third parties on the removal of works of art, listing, export control and contested heritage. His recent major heritage cases have included Dill in the Supreme Court and the Stonehenge road tunnel. David Sawtell is at 39 Essex Chambers. He was called to the Bar by Lincoln's Inn in 2005. His practice combines property law, construction law and commercial work, both domestically and internationally. He undertook his BA and his MPhil at the University of Cambridge, and completed the MSc in Construction Law at King's College, London. David is a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators. He is currently researching towards his PhD at the University of Cambridge. Catherine Dobson has a broad practice which combines general public law, environmental law and public international law. She has developed a niche expertise in historic environment matters, and has acted for owners and interest groups on art and antiquities matters, in particular on issues relating to the removal of art from historic buildings. She acted (led by Richard Harwood QC) for the successful for the former owner in Dill v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2020] UKSC 20, where the Supreme Court clarified the test for what can constitute a listed building. She has recently advised on the lawfulness of removal of a high value statue from a listed building. She has lectured on these topics at the Institute of Art and Law and is a Fellow of St Edmund's College, Cambridge, where she teaches constitution law. In 2020 Catherine was named Environmental and Planning Law Junior of the Year in the Chambers UK Bar Awards. CONTENTS Introduction PART ONE: REGULATORY CONSENTS Overview Chapter One - Listed Building Consent Chapter Two - Planning Permission Chapter Three - Scheduled Monuments and Conservation Areas Chapter Four - Grant of Regulatory Consent Chapter Five - Street Names Chapter Six - The Church of England PART TWO: OWNERSHIP Overview Chapter Seven -Annexation to the Land Chapter Eight -Conversion Chapter Nine -Conveyance PART THREE: A CASE STUDY Chapter Ten -The Statue of Edward Colston in Bristol
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