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Individual Patrimonial Rights Under the European Human Rights System: Some Reflections on the Concepts of Possession and Dispossession of Property
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2019
Extract
Both in general and in regional international law, the subject of private patrimonial rights presents a spectrum of interesting points for discussion. Amid the most notorious issues that have loomed in recent times in relation to this topic, one could refer to the dispute over the dormant accounts of Holocaust victims in Switzerland and other European countries (or, more widely, to the entire question of gold and other property stolen by the Nazis during the Second World War), to the problem of reprivatization of property in Eastern Europe, or to the issue of restitution of property taken in pursuance of communist reforms in the former Soviet Union and its former satellite countries.
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- Copyright © 1996 by the International Association of Law Libraries
References
1 See Property and Restitution: A Moral Responsibility of History, (at http://www.audionet.com/events/swc/property/) with national reports concerning the following countries: Argentina, Jorge Camarasa, author, Los Nazis en la Argentina, Buenos Aires; France, Brigitte Vital-Durand, author, Domaine Privé, Paris; Norway, Berit Reisel, psychologist, Norwegian Governmental Commission on Restitution, Oslo; Portugal, Antonio Louca, historian, New University of Lisbon; Spain, Jose-Maria Irujo, El Pais, Madrid; Sweden, Paul Levine, Swedish National commission on Jewish Assets, Uppsala; Switzerland, Curt Gasteyger, Graduate Institute of International Studies, Lausanne; Turkey, Cemil Koçak, author, Turkish German Relations, Ankara; Moderator: Dr. Shimon Samuels, Simon Wiesenthal Center, Paris Property and; Restitution: A Moral Responsibility of History http://www.audionet.com/events/swc/property. in pursuance of communist reforms in the former Soviet Union and its former satellite countries.2 Google Scholar
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