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Art for War
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29 September 2026

Understanding the world of art—particularly antiquities and archaeological artifacts—requires tracing how objects are removed from the ground, displaced by conflict or economic hardship, and ultimately reappear in the international art market. The odyssey of an artifact from its excavation site to an auction house, a private collection, or a museum display case raises a host of pressing concerns about the fragility of cultural heritage but also the global mechanisms that sustain its circulation. In recent years, growing awareness of a possible link between the illegal antiquities trade and terrorist financing has brought new scrutiny to regions marked by war and instability, particularly in the Middle East. In such places, archaeological sites are especially vulnerable to looting and illicit excavation, with the profits from these "blood antiquities" sometimes flowing back to fund further violence.
Art for War examines how this transformation in perception—from an archaeological concern to a matter of international security—reshaped the global response to antiquities trafficking. Viewing the trade through a security lens, the book offers scholars, policymakers, and students of international affairs a new way to understand how the protection of cultural heritage became entangled with the politics of counterterrorism and global security, sparking new debates over art, heritage, and security.
"This book captures an important turning point: the moment when heritage under threat became heritage as threat, and policy and politics responded accordingly. This idea pushed cultural heritage into the security landscape, and we are still dealing with the consequences."—Donna Yates, Maastricht University
"Kudos to Costanza Musu for the engaging and thought-provoking Art for War. Musu calls for a relentless and proactive fight against the trafficking of looted antiquities, a global security concern that exploits existing regulatory gaps and may lead to the annihilation of national and cultural identities. A fascinating book." —Brigadier General Giuseppe De Magistris, Assistant Director of the Istituto Alti Studi Difesa, Rome