269 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Virtual Workshop Trains U.S. Law Enforcement to Detect Trafficking in Fakes and Forgeries

    Trafficking in stolen, looted, or forged art, antiquities, and other cultural objects benefits criminal organizations and terrorist groups, erodes the legal art market, and harms our relationships with foreign partners and allies.

  2. ECA Launches the Arts Envoy IPR Program

    The Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs launched the Arts Envoy Intellectual Property Rights Program in December to highlight the importance of protecting intellectual property rights (IPR) of visual and performing artists.

  3. Cultural Heritage Game Jam Winners Honored at Expo2020

    The winners of the Cultural Heritage Game Jam were announced on December 16, 2021, at the USA Pavilion at Expo2020 in Dubai.

  4. Cultural Heritage Game Jam Winners Tell Their Story

    The role of games in protecting cultural heritage

  5. Cultural Heritage Coordinating Committee Convenes After Active Summer

    G20, museum ethical returns, and Army Monuments Officers discussed

  6. Iraq Cultural Heritage Project

    This multi-tiered project was developed by ECA's Cultural Heritage Center in collaboration with the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad and the Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage.

  7. Cultural Heritage Coordinating Committee Gathers in Washington

    On March 2, 2023, the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs’ Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Policy, Rafik Mansour, convened the 16 member agencies of the Cultural Heritage Coordinating Committee (CHCC).

  8. ECA Launches Cultural Heritage Preservation Online Distance-learning Course in Afghanistan

    A new online training course has launched on cultural heritage site preservation and management.

  9. Stolen Egyptian Treasures are Homeward Bound

    With its rich cultural history stretching back to the time of the pharaohs, Egypt has long been an inviting target for looters

  10. Virtual Workshop Trains U.S. Law Enforcement to Combat Trafficking in Manuscripts

    Over 100 participants included reps from across the federal government, U.S. universities, and private sector.

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