Geraldine Kendall Adams reporting in the Museums Association writes:
The UK Government is to exclude national museums and galleries from legislation that would have enabled them to restitute objects on moral grounds.
Under provisions in sections 15 and 16 of the Charities Act 2022, the trustees of national museums and galleries would have been allowed to seek authorisation from the Charity Commission if they felt compelled by moral obligation to make a transfer of charity property – a voluntary gesture of goodwill known as an ex gratia payment.
This would have provided them with a route to restitution, undermining existing statutes that prevent most national museums and galleries in England from deaccessioning items in all but limited circumstances.
The government says the implications of the legislation were not made clear when the bill passed through parliament.
In January this year, the arts and heritage minister, Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay, wrote to the Charity Commission to set out the government's position on the bill.
"The policy of HM Government is that national museums and galleries should continue to be bound by their governing legislation, precluding them from resolving to restitute objects from their collections other than in the limited and specific circumstances expressly provided for in legislation.
"To that end, we will specifically exclude those national museums and galleries from the commencement of sections 15 and 16 of the act."
The government is looking to bring sections 15 and 16 of the act into force later this year.
Some sector leaders, including Tristram Hunt, diirector of London's Victoria & Albert Museum, made clear that they would like national institutions to be given more leeway to return objects.
Read this Museums Association article in full.
An analysis of the issues around repatriation and restitution in national museums will be published in the March/April issue of Museums Journal.
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