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40 U.B.C. L. Rev. 421 (2007)
Totems and Teapots: The Royal British Columbia Museum Corporation

handle is hein.journals/ubclr40 and id is 425 raw text is: TOTEMS AND TEAPOTS: THE ROYAL BRITISH
COLUMBIA MUSEUM CORPORATION
ROBERT K. PATERSONt
I. INTRODUCTION
Recent years have seen increased turbulence surrounding the
normally placid lives of museums.' Many institutions confront
difficult financial challenges in the face of dwindling attendance
and declining government grants.2 While the acquisition and
display of objects remain major priorities for most museums,
many now also seek to redefine and examine their role in relation
to their client communities and constituencies. These pressures
and   changes   have    sometimes   been   reflected  in   debates
surrounding controversial exhibitions and have been accompanied
by increasing numbers of claims for the return of objects by
t Faculty of Law, University of British Columbia and Member, External
Advisory Board, UBC Museum of Anthropology.
I One of the best known instances of such controversy was the Sensation
exhibition of contemporary British art at the Brooklyn Museum in 1999, which
led to its condemnation by the then mayor of New York, Rudolph Guiliani, who
attempted to close the exhibition. This, in turn, led to a successful court challenge
by the museum on constitutional grounds. For background to these events, see
Peter Levine, Lessons from the Brooklyn Museum Controversy (2001), online:
<http://www.publicpolicy.umd.edu/IPPS/Summer00/brooklynmuseum controv
ersy.htm>. The International Council of Museums (ICOM) Code of Ethics for
Museums defines a museum as a non-profit making permanent institution in the
service of society and its development, open to the public, which acquires,
conserves, researches, communicates and exhibits, for purposes of study,
education and enjoyment, the tangible and intangible evidence of people and
their   environment:  (January    2006)   at    Glossary,   online:
<http://icom.museum/ethics.
html>.
2 See Martin Knelman, Flaherty Scrooge to Canada's Museums The
Toronto Star (27 September 2006) El.

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