01368nas a2200133 4500000000100000008004100001260002200042100001600064245008000080856015200160300001200312520088500324020002501209 d bSpringer New York1 aJ.H. French00aPerforming slave descent: Cultural heritage and the right to land in Brazil uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84857617343&doi=10.1007%2f978-0-387-71313-7_6&partnerID=40&md5=6479761ce8df388fe1c8214874eab9f6 a106-1313 a"Cultural heritage and human rights" is a counterintuitive pairing. Nevertheless, despite its inherent tension between the particular and the universal, cultural heritage and human rights have come to seem a natural marriage of terms. As an indication of the growing recognition that local "aspects of human achievement" have "universal significance" (Cleere 2001: 22) in the post-World War II era, the 1972 UNESCO World Heritage Convention was supplemented in 2003 to include intangible cultural heritage and in 2005 to protect diversity of cultural expressions. These important additions to the World Heritage Convention were intended to implement the 2001 UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity, whose Article 4 designated cultural diversity as a human right: "The defense of cultural diversity is an ethical imperative, inseparable from respect for human dignity." a9780387713120 (ISBN)