English

Português

Español

Français

Place Message Here

Magazine

About

Editorial Team

Authors

Articles Submission

Numbers

Agora

About

Editorial Team

Articles

Sections

Vol. 29 (2)
2025



Articles

A puzzle Narcissus: ethnography faces delirium and “stays” at the Hotel da Loucura – Rio de Janeiro

Luciano von der Goltz Vianna

The present article starts from a debate that aims to understand how the disciplinary regimes of Anthropology lead the researcher to follow a protocol of questions and interests in his research. The objective here is to discuss the existing

[+]


Articles

Por trás das crianças, dos objetos e dos cuises: agência e pesquisa em um bairro periurbano de Córdoba (Argentina)

Rocío Fatyass

Neste artigo retomo ideias emergentes de um projeto de pesquisa com crianças que acontece em um bairro periurbano da cidade de Villa Nueva (Córdoba, Argentina) e discuto a agência das crianças e sua participação na pesquisa em ciências

[+]


Articles

The construction of knowledge about the Amazon ecosystem by a Brazilian scientific institution

Aline Moreira Magalhães

Since expeditions by naturalists in the 18th century, the production of modern knowledge about the flora and fauna of the Amazon has included people who know the ecosystem from experience. At the National Institute for Amazon Research (INPA),

[+]


Interdisciplinarities

Living in a Siza house: the experience of auteur architecture in Malagueira, Évora

Juliana Pereira, Ana Catarina Costa, André Carmo, Eduardo Ascensão

This article draws on the genealogy of studies on the house in Portuguese Anthropology and Architecture as well as on recent perspectives coming from the Geographies of Architecture, to explore the way residents of auteur architecture experience

[+]


Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”

Introduction: Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses

Annabelle Dias Félix, Maria João Leote de Carvalho, Catarina Frois

In the global political landscape, as far-right parties gain prominence, populist rhetoric advocating for harsher justice and security policies is becoming increasingly prevalent. Proponents of this rhetoric base their discourse on “alarming”

[+]


Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”

Privatizing urban security: control, hospitality and suspicion in the Brazilian shopping

Susana Durão, Paola Argentin

In this article we argue that hospitality security – a modality that confuses control and care – operates through the actions of security guards in the creation of what we call pre-cases. From a dense ethnography accompanying these workers in a

[+]


Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”

“Police abuse, we face it every day”: ethnographic notes on racist police violence

Pedro Varela

Racist police violence is one of the most brutal facets of racism in our society, reflecting structures of power and oppression that marginalize sectors of our society. This paper emphasizes the importance of understanding this reality, highlighting

[+]


Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”

Marginality, security, surveillance, crime, imprisonment: reflections on an intellectual and methodological trajectory

Catarina Frois

This article engages with contemporary anthropological and ethnographic methodological debates by reflecting on the challenges of conducting research in contexts related with marginality, deviance, surveillance, and imprisonment. It examines the

[+]


Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”

Navigating the labyrinth: qualitative research in the securitized border regions of North Africa

Lydia Letsch

Qualitative researchers face unique challenges in the dynamic domain of border regions, particularly when venturing into highly securitized areas with a constant military presence, advanced surveillance, and restricted access zones. This article

[+]


Memory

Uma vida, muitas vidas: entrevista com Victor Bandeira, etnógrafo e viajante

Rita Tomé, João Leal

Falecido recentemente, Victor Bandeira (1931-2024) desempenhou um papel fundamental no desenvolvimento da museologia etnográfica em Portugal. Foi graças às suas expedições a África (1960-1961, 1966, 1967), ao Brasil (1964-1965) e à Indonésia

[+]


Lévi-Strauss Award

From the “note of condolence” to the “unjust aggression”: news about death written by the PMSC

Jo P. Klinkerfus

This paper is a reduced and synthesized version of the ethnography on PMSC Notícia, the news platform of the Military Police of Santa Catarina (PMSC). Based on news about death, dying and the dead published on the website in 2021, social

[+]

Vol. 29 (1)
2025



Artigos

“Enough of this fake war”: ecologies of value, workers and environmentalists in Southern Italy

Antonio Maria Pusceddu

This article mobilizes the ecologies of value as a conceptual framework to account for the conflicts, contradictions and dilemmas arousing from the experience of the contemporary socio-ecological crisis. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Brindisi,

[+]


Artigos

“Preventing them from being adrift”: challenges for professional practice in the Argentinean mental health system for children and adolescents

Axel Levin

This ethnographic article addresses the difficulties, practices, and strategies of the professionals of the only Argentine hospital fully specialized in the treatment of mental health problems of children and adolescents. More specifically, it

[+]


Artigos

Making Children: an iconography of the ibejadas in the centers, religious article shops, and factories of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Morena Freitas

The ibejadas are childlike entities that, alongside the caboclos, pretos-velhos, exus, and pombagiras, inhabit the umbanda pantheon. In religious centers, these entities manifest through colorful images, joyful sung chants and an abundance of sweets

[+]


Artigos

To migrate and to belong: intimacy, ecclesiastical absence, and playful competition in the Aymara Anata-Carnival of Chiapa (Chile)

Pablo Mardones

The article analyzes the Anata-Carnival festivity celebrated in the Andean town of Chiapa in the Tarapacá Region, Great North of Chile. I suggest that this celebration constitutes one of the main events that promote the reproduction of feelings of

[+]


Artigos

Hauntology and nostalgia in the touristed landscapes of Sarajevo

Marta Roriz

Drawing on anthropological and ethnographic developments in the study of urban tourism, this essay offers a description of Sarajevo’s tourist landscapes from the perspective of an ethnographic tourist, detailing how time is inscribed in the

[+]


Memory

David J. Webster in Mozambique: minimal epistolary (1971-1979)

Lorenzo Macagno

The article comments on, contextualizes and transcribes the epistolary exchange between social anthropologist David J. Webster (1945-1989) and ethnologist and Portuguese colonial official António Rita-Ferreira (1922-2014) between 1971 and 1979.

[+]


Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’

Género e cuidados na experiência transnacional cabo-verdiana: introdução

Luzia Oca González, Fernando Barbosa Rodrigues and Iria Vázquez Silva

Neste dossiê sobre o género e os cuidados na comunidade transnacional cabo-verdiana, as leitoras e leitores encontrarão os resultados de diferentes etnografias feitas tanto em Cabo Verde como nos países de destino da sua diáspora no sul da

[+]


Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’

“Vizinhu ta trocadu pratu ku kada casa”… Caring to avoid hunger in Brianda, Santiago Island, Cape Verde

Fernando Barbosa Rodrigues

Taking the ethnographic field as a starting point – the interior of the island of Santiago in the Republic of Cabo Verde – and basing on participant observation and the collection of testimonies from the local inhabitants of Brianda, this

[+]


Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’

“Eu já aguentei muita gente nessa vida”: about care, gender, and generation in Cape Verdian families

Andréa Lobo and André Omisilê Justino

This article reflects on the care category when crossed by the dynamics of gender and generation in Cape Verde. The act of caring is of fundamental importance for family dynamics in this society, which is marked by mobilities of multiple orders –

[+]


Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’

Global care chains in Cape Verdean migrations: women who stay so that others can migrate

Luzia Oca González and Iria Vázquez Silva

This article is based on fieldwork conducted with women of four generations, belonging to five families living in the locality of Burela (Galicia) and their domestic groups originating from the island of Santiago. We present three ethnographic

[+]


Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’

The difficult balance between work and life: care arrangements in three generations of Cape Verdean migrants

Keina Espiñeira González, Belén Fernández-Suárez and Antía Pérez-Caramés

The reconciliation of the personal, work and family spheres of migrants is an emerging issue in migration studies, with concepts such as the transnational family and global care chains. In this contribution we analyse the strategies deployed by

[+]


Debate

Universal foreigners: the ‘ontological turn’ considered from a phenomenological perspective

Filipe Verde

This article questions the consistency, reasonableness, and fruitfulness of the methodological proposals and idea of anthropological knowledge of the “ontological turn” in anthropology. Taking as its starting point the book manifesto produced by

[+]


Debate

Universos estrangeiros: ainda a polêmica virada ontológica na antropologia

Rogério Brittes W. Pires

O artigo “Estrangeiros universais”, de Filipe Verde, apresenta uma crítica ao que chama de “viragem ontológica” na antropologia, tomando o livro The Ontological Turn, de Holbraad e Pedersen (2017), como ponto de partida (2025a: 252).1 O

[+]


Debate

Resposta a Rogério Pires

Filipe Verde

Se há evidência que a antropologia sempre reconheceu é a de que o meio em que somos inculturados molda de forma decisiva a nossa compreensão do mundo e de nós mesmos. Isso é assim para a própria antropologia e, portanto, ser antropólogo é

[+]


Debate

Da ontologia da fenomenologia na antropologia: ensaio de resposta

Rogério Brittes W. Pires

Um erro do construtivismo clássico é postular que verdades alheias seriam construídas socialmente, mas as do próprio enunciador não. Que minha visão de mundo, do fazer antropológico e da ciência sejam moldadas por meu ambiente – em

[+]

Note on the cover

Note on the cover

Pedro Calapez

© Pedro Calapez. 2023. (Pormenor) Díptico B; Técnica e Suporte: Acrílico sobre tela colada em MDF e estrutura em madeira. Dimensões: 192 x 120 x 4 cm. Imagem gentilmente cedidas pelo autor. Créditos fotográficos: MPPC / Pedro

[+]

Magazine

About

Editorial Team

Authors

Articles Submission

Numbers

Agora

About

Editorial Team

Articles

Sections

Privacy Policy

Iscte-Instituto Universitário de Lisboa
Edifício 4 - Iscte_Conhecimento e Inovação, Sala B1.130 
Av. Forças Armadas, 40 1649-026 Lisboa, Portugal

(+351) 210 464 057
etnografica@cria.org.pt

Financiado pela FCT, I. P. (UIDB/04038/2020 e UIDP/04038/2020)

© 2026 Revista Etnográfica

Magazine

About

Editorial Team

Authors

Articles Submission

Numbers

Agora

About

Editorial Team

Articles

Sections

Privacy Policy

Iscte-Instituto Universitário de Lisboa
Edifício 4 - Iscte_Conhecimento e Inovação, Sala B1.130 
Av. Forças Armadas, 40 1649-026 Lisboa, Portugal

(+351) 210 464 057
etnografica@cria.org.pt

Financiado pela FCT, I. P. (UIDB/04038/2020 e UIDP/04038/2020)

© 2026 Revista Etnográfica

Dossier Between restitution and re-appropriation

Negotiating identities: the restitution of a Tupinambá cloak to Brazil and the role of diplomacy in bridging an international legal gap

Letícia Machado Haertel

Luan Matheus Emiliano Moraes

18.12.2025

restitution of cultural heritage, repatriation, iplomacy, alternative dispute resolution, Tupinambá cloak, international law
This paper examines the negotiations that led to the agreement on the restitution of a Tupinambá cloak from the Nationalmuseet in Denmark to Brazil three centuries after its removal. Unlike many contentious restitution cases, this process was conducted confidentially and concluded amicably, underscoring the potential of diplomacy as an Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) mechanism in cultural heritage restitution. Through an exploration of the cloak’s history, the international legal framework on cultural heritage restitution, and the specifics of the negotiations, this study highlights the role of diplomacy in addressing legal gaps that often hinder such efforts. The article emphasizes the imperative for governments to proactively gather, amplify, and formally incorporate community voices in restitution demands to foreign institutions, ensuring that cultural heritage claims are articulated and pursued effectively. By analyzing the restitution of this Tupinambá cloak, this paper contributes to a growing body of scholarship on the intersection of diplomacy, cultural heritage, and international law, offering insights into how collaborative approaches may achieve meaningful outcomes in the preservation and repatriation of cultural artifacts.

Introduction


The Nationalmuseet (National Museum) in Copenhagen announced in May 2023 that one of the five Tupinambá cloaks that are part of its ethnographic collection would be returned to Brazil after more than 300 years outside the country. The artifact, of undeniable monumental importance to the Tupinambá people and one of the most notorious objects from Brazil retained in foreign collections, is expected to be integrated into the National Museum’s collection in Rio de Janeiro by the end of 2024.[1] The restitution process was led by Rodrigo de Azeredo Santos, who was serving as the Brazilian ambassador to Denmark during the negotiations. The entire procedure was carried out in secret and appears to have been handled in a remarkably amicable manner, with the official note released by the Danish Museum expressing great satisfaction in “donating” the artifact to the National Museum in Rio de Janeiro. This victory for Brazilian cultural heritage deserves celebration and hopefully will serve as an example to foreign museums that likewise retain other nations’ artifacts.


Image 1: Tupinambá cloak at the center of diplomatic negotiations between Brazilian and Danish authorities regarding its restitution. Technique: Color photograph. Credit: Niels Erik Jehrbo, Danish National Museum.

Since the #UbirajaraBelongstoBR campaign gave unprecedented visibility to the issue of restitution of Brazilian heritage illegally exported and kept in institutions abroad (Haertel 2023a), daily news about the progress of various demands for the restitution of Brazilian artifacts circulates in national media. There are recurrent reports on the arduous obstacles faced by the people and institutions involved in the fight for the return of national heritage working concurrently in simultaneous negotiations with multiple countries. In the case of the “Ubirajara jubatus”[2] fossil, it took years of intense work, complex articulations on different levels – including the political, diplomatic, scientific, and cultural spheres – for the demand to even be considered, and its success is due, in large part, to the unprecedentedly ample support that Brazilian scientists received from civil society through social media platforms.[3] It was an arduous, democratic, and complex process, leading up to an equally praiseworthy conquest for the country.


When contrasted with the general context of the claims for the restitution of Brazilian heritage held abroad, the seemingly sudden announcement of the return of the Tupinambá cloak caused a certain surprise. The reason behind this surprise is that the negotiations were conducted entirely in secret, and neither the public nor academics and practitioners involved with other restitution demands were aware that such discussions were taking place. While it is not uncommon for similar negotiations to follow this approach, this case differed significantly from the more contentious processes observed in concomitant restitution efforts. This case highlights the significant role diplomacy can play as an Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) mechanism in the cultural heritage restitution arena and the importance of understanding its context and principles.


In this paper, we will explore the history and procedures leading up to the successful agreement on the restitution of one Tupinambá cloak from Denmark to Brazil, examining the role of diplomacy and ADR mechanisms in bridging the international legal gaps that often complicate the return of cultural heritage artifacts. After this brief introduction, we will contextualize the need for ADR mechanisms as diplomatic negotiations in the cultural heritage restitution field (part 1). In sequence, we will examine the origins of the Tupinambá cloak and the historical context preceding the negotiation of its restitution (part 2), followed by an analysis of the potential of diplomatic negotiations as a means for restitution of cultural heritage, as exemplified by the case under study (part 3).

Understanding the need for alternative solutions in the cultural heritage restitution field


Before exploring the intricacies of diplomatic negotiations as an ADR method, it is necessary to take a step back and discuss the main reason why alternative methods are the most commonly adopted procedures in the cultural heritage restitution field. As recurrently held in resolutions by the United Nations General Assembly and UNESCO,[4] the historical and continuing illicit trafficking in cultural property and its damage to the cultural heritage of nations is deeply concerning to the international community.


With the establishment of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in 1945 and its statutory mandate on cultural matters,[5] the international community finally had an opportunity to regulate the issue of illicit trafficking at a global level and develop mechanisms to promote the repatriation of objects that had already been removed from their places of origin. In 1964, the UNESCO selected a Committee of Experts and, four years later, adopted a resolution authorizing the drafting of a convention.[6] The negotiation rounds that followed were profoundly marked by the clashes between “source” and “market” nations, namely, between States historically plundered and deprived of important artifacts integral to their cultural heritage and those where the “demand” for cultural objects exceeds the “supply” and, therefore, have historically received and retained objects from other nations (Hoffman 2009).


Some of the most heated debates on the records pertained to what would eventually become Article 7(b)(ii) of the 1970 UNESCO Convention, which provides an obligation to return cultural property illegally exported upon request of the state of origin.[7] From these discussions, a “compromise” emerged: the Convention would enshrine an obligation to return, but this obligation would only be applicable to objects imported into another State’s jurisdiction after the entry into force of the Convention (Haertel 2022). After the delegates achieved this and other relevant agreements on the treaty’s final draft,[8] the Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property was adopted by UNESCO’s General Conference on November 1970 and entered into force in 1972.


It is necessary to advise that the word “compromise” must be understood with a considerable degree of caution in the context of cultural heritage disputes, as parties tend to have unequal bargaining power. “Source” nations tend to be developing States historically submitted to colonialism, occupation, or other forms of exploration, which lower their negotiating power (Chechi 2014).  The consequences of the aforementioned “compromise” were already clear upon the Convention’s adoption, as registered in statements by delegates from States historically deprived of their heritage. No hindsight was needed for them to affirm, more than 50 years ago, that the non-retroactivity of the 1970 UNESCO Convention would result in it having no meaningful effect on the issue of restitution, as all major objects of cultural significance were already held abroad (Prott and O’Keefe 1990). This factual scenario is verifiable in the Brazilian context, as the great majority of its cultural artifacts already detected abroad left the country before 1970 – as it is the case, for instance, of all eleven Tupinambá cloaks held in public collections overseas.[9]


It is worth noting that the 1970 UNESCO Convention does not explicitly state its non-retroactivity. Nonetheless, it is non-retroactive due to the lack of provisions attesting the contrary, according to the general principle under international law that treaties do not apply retroactively unless they explicitly state otherwise.[10] While Article 15 of the 1970 UNESCO Convention[11] provides that the non-retroactive application of treaties does not, in any way, legitimize transactions that have taken place before the entry into force of the Convention, it does not change the reality that the crucial provision which demands that States harboring trafficked artifacts must return them enshrined in article 7(b)(ii) has no effect upon such cases. The same weakness is reflected in other binding instruments dealing with the restitution of cultural property (Chechi 2014). This has been a major hindrance in discussing the restitution of objects removed from their places of origin a long time ago (Haertel 2022).[12]


As the 1970 UNESCO Convention did not satisfy the concerns of nations historically deprived of their heritage, the importance of having a mechanism to handle cases that originated prior to it continued to be discussed in the international arena. In 1976, a Committee of Experts previously tasked by UNESCO with studying the question recommended the creation of an international body with a mandate to facilitate bilateral negotiations for the resolution of disputes concerning displaced cultural objects (Prott 2009). Based on their conclusions, the UNESCO General Conference created, in 1978, the Intergovernmental Committee for Promoting the Return of Cultural Property to Its Countries of Origin or Its Restitution in Case of Illicit Appropriation (ICPRCP) and entrusted it with the mandate of assisting UNESCO member States in dealing with cases falling outside the scope of the existing conventions on the restitution of cultural property, potentially filling the gap generated by the non-retroactivity of the 1970 UNESCO Convention (Haertel 2022).


Once again, however, addressing the concerns voiced by “source” nations was accompanied by a caveat detrimental to their claims: the lack of temporal restraints for an intervention by the ICPRCP was compensated with its lack of jurisdictional power to rule in disputes between States (Ognibene 2019; Chechi 2014; Haertel 2022).[13] In other words, it merely acts in an advisory capacity by offering a framework for discussion and bilateral negotiations with which States are free to engage (and to refuse to do so). In a similar manner as the outcome of the negotiations leading up to the 1970 UNESCO Convention, the ICPRCP’s effectiveness as a dispute settlement mechanism for disputes emerging a long time ago.

The Tupinambá cloak and the historical context preceding the negotiation of its restitution


The Tupinambá loak subject to this study is primarily made with feathers from the “Guará” (Eudocimus ruber), a bird endemic to the Brazilian coast whose dietary habits determine the strong red color of its feathers, the most a prominent feature of the species and of the garment itself (Chade 2023). This cloak’s origin is directly linked to the spiritual context of the Tupinambá tradition that predates European occupations of the American continent. These long garments were customarily produced to be used in political assemblies, funerary rituals, and anthropophagic rituals, the most notable manifestation of this indigenous people’s culture (Tupinambá 2024), registered in reports of European explorers such as Hans Staden.[14] The cloaks were understood as a form of personification of the birds’ natural spirits and as a means for establishing a connection with spiritual entities called “Encantados” ("îkātara-eta"), spiritual guides for the Tupinambá people (Tugny et al. 2021).


Figure 2: “Dance of the Tupinambá.” Technique: Illustration. Credit: Theodore de Bry, for Navegatio in Brasilian Americae, Frankfurt, 1592.



Even though there is historical evidence for a considerably extensive production of Tupinambá cloaks throughout pre-colonial and early colonial periods, there are only 11 known surviving Tupinambá cloaks in public collections – all of them in European museums. The Nationalmuseet in Copenhagen (Denmark) will still retain four cloaks after the arrival of the garment subject to the negotiations to Brazil,[15] with the other exemplars are distributed as follows: two at the Museo di Storia Naturale of the University of Florence (Italy), one at the Museum Septalianum of the Ambrosian Library in Milan (Italy), one at the Museum der Kulturen in Basel (Switzerland), one at the Musée Royale d’Art et d’Histoire in Brussels (Belgium), and one at the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris (France).


One must also consider the possibility of many others existing in private collections, but their nature remotely limits the possibility of hypothesizing precise numbers. Feather art produced in Brazil was, since the arrival of the Portuguese in that country, an object of interest to Europeans. As during the colonial period, multiple merchants, naturalists, missionaries and explorers were interested in obtaining and trading these items in Europe, resulting in a large market for the items (Buono 2018), it is likely that more cloaks survived the test of time and are held privately.


Figure 3: “Cape”, Tupinambá coak located in the collection of the Musée du Quai Branly, in Paris (France). Technique: Color photograph. Credit: Unknown. Available at: https://www.quaibranly.fr/fr/explorer-les-collections/base/Work/action/show/notice/120614-cape. Accessed on June 27, 2024.



The date when the specific Tupinambá cloak that will be returned to Brazil left its territory around three centuries ago is unknown and will likely remain unknown, considering the contemporaneous existence of multiple exemplars, the scarcity and potential unreliability of sources, and the violent and oppressive circumstances of the colonial period. The historical context leads to the formulation of a reasonable hypothesis that the object was looted or otherwise stolen, aggravating the scarcity of potential sources (MPI 2023). Glicéria Tupinambá has also raised the possibility that the cloak reached the European continent through exchanges between indigenous authorities and Europeans, who, when visiting each other, brought gifts as an act of diplomacy (Chade 2023).


The most accepted hypothesis, with some degree of concrete contours – also deemed reasonable by Glicéria Tupinamá (Chade 2023) – proposes that this cloak belonged to Johann Moritz von Nassau-Siegen (1604-1679), a German-Dutch nobleman who served as the governor of the  Dutch colony in Recife, on the north-eastern coast (Due 2002). During his administration, Nassau showed great interest in studying the territory and its peoples, leading to his assembly of his famous collection.[16] Upon returning to the Netherlands, the garment could have been part of the collection presented by Nassau to the king of Denmark, Frederick III (1606-1670), as posited by authors such as Ribeiro and Velthem (1992). Notwithstanding the mystery surrounding the cloak’s arrival in Denmark, the first clear historical record of its existence in the country is its registration on the Nationalmuseet collection in 1690, after being located in King Frederick III’s collection (Métraux 1927).


Based on the historical record of when the cloak subject to the recent restitution negotiations was integrated to the Nationalmuseet’s collection, it remained outside its country of origin for 310 years until one brief and temporary presence in national territory on the turn to the 21st century. In 2000, the Nationalmuseet “loaned” this specific Tupinambá cloak to the Mostra do Redescobrimento (in English, “Rediscovery Exhibition”) happening in São Paulo. At the invitation of the newspaper Folha de São Paulo, two Tupinambá leaders, Nivalda Amaral de Jesus and Aloísio Cunha Silva, visited the indigenous pavilion where the cloak was displayed. As reported in the same newspaper, they were significantly impacted upon their first contact with the cloak and expressed that they could not allow the artifact to be taken abroad again (Antenore 2000).

Figure 4: Nivalda Amaral de Jesus, 67, and Aloísio Cunha Silva, 41, observe the Tupinambá Cloak. Technique: Color photograph. Credit: Flávio Florido | Folhapress, São Paulo (2000).


The news piece from Folha de São Paulo also quoting Nivalda as stating: “We are undergoing a process of cultural recovery. Recovering the mantle means bringing the memory of our ancestor closer” and “We will decide soon. If we need a petition, we will do it. If we need a lawsuit, we will file it” (Antenore 2000). Nonetheless, there is no evidence that any Brazilian authority that could properly present a claim to the State of Denmark or to the Nationalmuseet directly ever did so.[17]

The potential of diplomatic negotiations as a means for restitution of cultural heritage as exemplified by the Tupinambá cloak

After brief months during which the Tupinambá cloak that is the object of this study, was located within national territory for the Mostra do Redescobrimento, the matter of its restitution eventually disappeared from public conscience. For two decades, the garment was continuously exhibited at the Nationalmuseet, until it was seen in 2021 by the Brazilian ambassador to Denmark, Mr. Rodrigo de Azeredo Santos, upon his visit to the museum (Roxo 2023). After this first contact, the ambassador researched the object’s history and provenance,[18] confirming that it was Brazilian, and that State authorities had never presented a formal repatriation request to Denmark (Roxo 2023).


Ambassador Azeredo Santos then proceeded to mediate interactions and negotiations between the National Museum in Rio de Janeiro, Tupinambá leaders from the lands of Olivença, and the Nationalmuseet in Copenhagen. In this context, the artist and academic Glicéria Tupinambá was invited by the Nationalmuseet to visit the institution, during which she saw the cloak that would return to Brazil and the other four garments stored in the museum’s technical reserve and participated in the seminar “Different pasts – sustainable futures” (Roxo 2023).


Figure 5: Glicéria Tupinambá examines the sacred cloak at the National Museum of Denmark. Technique: Color photograph. Credit: Renata Cursio Valente | National Museum RJ.


Having established the initial connection between the museums and the Tupinambá community, ambassador Azeredo Santos collected three letters addressed to the Nationalmuseet. Two letters were written by the Tupinambá leaders Maria Valdelice Amaral de Jesus and Rosivaldo Ferreira da Silva and demonstrated the cultural and spiritual importance of the mantles. The third letter, signed by the National Museum’s director, focused on specifying the plans for the piece upon its restitution and the role it would have in the new collection (Chade 2023).


The next step was the submission of a formal request for restitution by the Brazilian National Museum. Upon receiving it, the director of the Nationalmuseet, Rane Willerslev, forwarded it to the museum’s council and obtained a favorable opinion. Equipped with their positive response, the director sent a request to the Danish Ministry of Culture, Jakob Engel-Schmidt, who finally accepted the solicitation in May 31st, 2023, and confirmed that the cloak would be repatriated in 2024 (Roxo 2023).


Diplomatic negotiations are the processes by which diplomats, ambassadors, and other official representatives of States engage in dialogue and discussion to resolve issues, settle disputes, or agree on mutual interests in a broad range of topics – as seen in the case at hand, including cultural exchanges and the restitution of cultural heritage items. The primary goal of these negotiations is to reach agreements that are acceptable to all parties involved, thereby preventing conflicts and fostering peaceful relations, and they often follow a structured process, which can be broken down into several key stages.


In the case of this Tupinambá cloak, the preparation stage involved ambassador Azeredo Santos conducting thorough research on the artifact’s history and provenance. This stage also involved consultations with representatives of the community of origin and the institution that would become the destination of the cloak, the National Museum in Rio de Janeiro, to align their goals and objectives. Consulting and involving the community of origin was – as it always is – essential, as their insights and endorsement provide cultural and spiritual legitimacy to the restitution claim and ensure that the negotiation strategy is informed by their values and needs. With a comprehensive preparation leading to the development of a clear and culturally sensitive strategy for the subsequent negotiations, it is possible to proceed to the next phase.


As negotiations formally commence, the parties usually outline their positions and objectives during an initial meeting, setting the tone for the discussions and establishing a framework for subsequent meetings. It is not possible to evaluate the precise steps of the negotiation leading up to the restitution of the Tupinambá cloak due to their confidential nature. Nonetheless, this stage is usually marked by the parties presenting proposals, negotiating terms, explaining their stances, and making concessions. There may be significant moments that contribute to building mutual understanding and respect, such as it seems to have been the case with the participation of Glicéria Tupinambá in the seminar “Different pasts – sustainable futures” hosted by the Nationalmuseet. During this event, Glicéria’s engagement helped illustrate the cultural and spiritual importance of the cloak, thereby fostering a deeper appreciation among the Danish negotiators and aiding in the advancement of the negotiations.


Once the parties reach a consensus, the terms of the agreement are drafted. While it does not have to follow any specific form, this document usually outlines the commitments of each party and eventual mechanisms for implementation. This draft agreement then undergoes a “ratification” stage, where it is reviewed and approved by the relevant authorities. This is crucial for providing the necessary legitimacy and formal endorsement for the agreement. In the case of the Tupinambá cloak, the involvement of the Danish museum's council and Ministry of Culture demonstrates a multilayered approval system that ensures thorough scrutinization of the terms of the agreement – ideally including its broader cultural, political, and practical implications. This example also underscores the importance of institutional support and governmental backing in achieving successful restitution agreements, ensuring that the commitments made during negotiations are honored and able to be implemented effectively.


Thus, negotiators must be able to convey their country’s (or institution’s) position while also listening to and understanding the perspectives of the other parties. In many cases, especially those involving sensitive issues, negotiations are conducted confidentially to prevent external pressures and allow for more open discussions – which was precisely the case on the negotiations over the restitution of this Tupinambá cloak. By conducting a discreet and respectful dialogue, ambassador Rodrigo de Azeredo Santos and his team were able to bridge gaps, address concerns, and reach what seems to be a mutually satisfying resolution.


Overall, diplomatic negotiations can bypass the often lengthy and adversarial legal processes, providing an efficient and amicable solution to disputes over cultural artifacts. While the success of diplomatic negotiations in the restitution of this Tupinambá cloak showcases the potential of this method, it does not diminish the importance of other approaches, particularly in situations where the other party is highly adversarial. In other words, this analysis should not obfuscate the cruciality of broad popular movement and certain degree of confrontation in some restitution disputes – especially when this opposition occurs, as it recurrently happens, through the use of arguments filled with prejudice, unfair statements, or untrue factual premises.[19] Quite the contrary, the return of the “Ubirajara jubatus” dinosaur fossil and, more recently, the struggle to have a collection of more than 600 indigenous objects illegally retained by the Lille Natural History Museum for almost 20 years returned to Brazil, demonstrate the imperative of broad population mobilization and institutional action in the fight for heritage.


In such cases, legal avenues, public campaigns, and other forms of pressure are essential tools to compel cooperation and ensure that rightful claims are addressed (Haertel 2023a). While diplomacy thrives on mutual respect and willingness to negotiate, adversarial circumstances might require the robust frameworks and enforcement mechanisms that only legal proceedings and sustained public advocacy can provide. Albeit International Cultural Heritage Law does not (yet) provide such robust legal mechanisms, advocacy and diplomacy have an even more pronounced role to play.

Final remarks


While many dismiss the impact of the separation of peoples and their heritage as a “thing of the past”, it is a present issue with direct implications on the enjoyment of human rights worldwide. The connection between communities and some objects transcends any artistic, archaeological, or monetary value, being crucial to their identity, dignity, and spirituality. Breaking this connection has intergenerational effects, preventing descendants from maintaining their people’s worldview and way of life. In the recent awakening of restitution claims, voices formerly unheard have become impossible to ignore, and both “source” and “market” States are tasked with finding solutions to these disputes. For that, diplomatic negotiations are an essential tool.


More than contributing to the settlement of disagreements before they reach the level of an international dispute, diplomatic negotiations contribute to the development and reinforcement of international law and norms, as the agreements reached may set good practices and establish frameworks for future interactions between States. The successful restitution of the Tupinambá cloak exemplifies the potential of diplomacy to bridge international legal gaps and achieve significant outcomes in the preservation of cultural heritage, leading to restoration of cultural identity and historical justice.


This process invites us to one final and much-needed reflection. The two Tupinambá leaders who came into contact with the cloak at the Mostra do Redescobrimento in 2000 expressed a clear desire for the artifact to be definitively returned to Brazil. Even so, ambassador Azeredo Santos reported, after researching the matter, that “Brazil had never officially demanded the return of the artifact” (Roxo 2023). That is, more than 20 years were needed for a Brazilian governmental authority to make the first attempt to carry out the demand clearly delineated by representatives of the artifact’s community of origin to see it permanently returned to the country.


This case-study illustrates that, although many foreign institutions are notoriously closed to demands for restitution and require intense coordination through multiple channels – including by civil society – over long periods, some may be surprisingly open to hearing to the community’s voices. For that, governmental authorities must at least ensure that such voices are echoed beyond national borders.


Regardless of whether a scenario of cooperation or dispute arises, it is absolutely imperative that Brazilian authorities make available and strengthen institutional channels capable of forwarding emerging claims for the restitution of our assets in order to recover old claims, identify new demands and formally request the return of our artifacts to the competent authorities. For that, a balanced approach that incorporates both diplomatic and other methods, tailored to the specific context and dynamics of each case, remains crucial for the effective restitution of cultural heritage.

Letícia Machado Haertel


Center for Research and Documentation of Contemporary Brazilian History, School of Social Sciences, Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGV CPDOC), Brazil; leticiahaertel@gmail.com



Luan Matheus Emiliano Moraes


Law School, Fundação Getulio Vargas, Brazil; luan.moraes@fgv.edu.br





ANTENORE, Armando, 2000, “01/06/2000: ‘Somos tupinambás, queremos o manto de volta’ ”, Folha de São Paulo. Available at https://noticias.uol.com.br/ultimas-noticias/redacao/2000/06/01/01062000-somos-tupinambas-queremos-o-manto-de-volta.htm (last access June 2024).


BASTIDE, Catherine, 2019, “The impossible return: Africa wants its art back from French museums”, The New York Times. Available at https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/03/arts/design/african-art-france-museums-restitution.html (last access June 2024).


BOUNO, Amy, 2018, “Seu tesouro são penas de pássaro: arte plumária tupinambá e a imagem da América”, Figura: Studies on the Classical Tradition, 6 (2). Available at https://econtents.bc.unicamp.br/inpec/index.php/figura/article/view/9950/5324 (last access June 2024).


CHADE, Jamil, 2023, “Alta tecnologia tentará decifrar origem e rota do manto tupinambá”, Portal UOL. Available at https://noticias.uol.com.br/colunas/jamil-chade/2023/08/24/alta-tecnologiatentara-decifrar-origem-e-rota-de-manto-tupinamba.htm (last access June 2024).


CHECHI, Alessandro, 2014, The Settlement of International Cultural Heritage Disputes. Oxford: Oxford University Press.


DUE, Berete, 2002, “Artefatos brasileiros no Kunstkammer real”, in Barbara Berlowicz (ed.), Berete Due, Peter Pentz and Espen Wæhle, Albert Eckhout Volta ao Brasil, 1644-2002. Copenhagen: Nationalmuseet.


 


FRANÇOZO, Mariana, 2014, “Global connections: Johan Maurtis of Nassau-Siegen's collection of curiosities”, in Michiel Van Groesen, The Legacy of Dutch Brazil. New York: Cambridge University Press.


HAERTEL, Letícia, 2020, Fortdauernde Verletzungen und Rückführung von Kulturgut: Eine Fallstudie zur Neuvorlage des Falls der Parthenon Marbles vor dem EGMR. LMU, Munich, Germany, master's thesis.


HAERTEL, Letícia M., 2022, “The past, present: the Parthenon sculptures dispute as an example of the ICPRCP’s role on claims barred by the non-retroactivity of the 1970 UNESCO Convention”, ,International Journal of Cultural Property, 28: 479-504.


HAERTEL, Letícia M., 2023, “#UbirjaraBelongtoBR: a restituição de fósseis e o papel do direito internacional para a decolonização da ciência”, Direito Internacional em Expansão. Belo Horizonte: Arraes.


HAERTEL, Letícia M., 2023, “The Parthenon sculptures and #UbirajaraBelongstoBR: a commentary on old excuses and bad faith”, The British Committee for the Reunification of the Parthenon Marbles. Available at https://www.parthenonuk.com/latest-news/800-leticia-machado-haerte (last access June 2024).


HELENO, Haroldo, 2023, “Repatriar nossos artefatos e demarcar nosso território”, Le Monde Diplomatique. Available at https://diplomatique.org.br/repatriar-nossos-artefatos-e-demarcar-nosso-territorio/ (last access June 2024).


HOFFMAN, Barbara, 2009, “Introduction to parts ii and iii: cultural rights, cultural property, and international trade”, in Barbara Hoffman (eds.), Art and Cultural Heritage: Law, Policy and Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.


MÉTRAUX, Alfred, 1927, “Nationalmuseet Fjerprydelser fra Tupinamba’erne”, Geografisk Tidsskrift, 30 (4). Available at Visualização de: Ornamentos de Penas do Museu Nacional do Tupinambá. | Revista Geográfica (tidsskrift.dk) (last access June 2024).


MINISTÉRIO DAS RELAÇÕES EXTERIORES, “Planejamento extratégico da embaixada do Brasil em Copenhague”. Available at https://legis.senado.leg.br/sdleg-getter/documento?dm=9557249 (last access June 2024).


MINISTÉRIO DOS POVOS INDÍGENAS, 2023, “MPI cria grupo para reaver artefatos indígenas que estão no exterior”, Agência Gov. Available at https://agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br/noticia/2023/11/mpi-cria-grupo-reaver-artefatos (last access June 2024).


OGNIBENE, William, 2019, “Lost to the ages: international patrimony and the problem faced by foreign states in establishing ownership of looted antiquities”, Brooklyn Law Review, 84 (2), 605-633.


OLAIYA, Adeyinka, 2023, “Repatriation: Denmark returns Brazil’s stolen ancestors, Tupinambá Indians’ mantle enriches indigenous heritage”, The Ancestral News. Available at https://ancestrals.com.ng/2023/11/03/denmark-returns-brazils-stollen-ancestors-rear-tupinamba-mantle-enriches-indigenous-heritage/ (last access June 2024).


PROTT, Lyndel, and Patrick O’KEEFE, 1990, Law and the Cultural Heritage, 3. London: Butterworths.


PROTT, Lyndel, 2009, Witnesses to History: A Compendium of Documents and Writings on the Return of Cultural Objects. Paris: UNESCO.


RIBEIRO, Berta, Lucia van VELTHEM, and Manuela CUNHA (eds.), 1998, História dos Índios no Brasil. São Paulo: Companhia das Letras: FAPESP.


ROXO, Elisangela, 2021, “Longe de casa”, Revista Piauí, 182. Available at https://piaui.folha.uol.com.br/materia/longe-de-casa-2/ (last access June 2024).


ROXO, Elisangela, 2023, “A volta do manto tupinambá”, Revista Piauí. Available at  https://piaui.folha.uol.com.br/volta-do-manto-tupinamba/ (last access June 2024).


STADEN, Hans, 2011, “Duas viagens ao Brasil: primeiros registros sobre o Brasil”, L&PM.


TUGNY, Augustin de, et al., 2021, Kwá yepé turusú yuriri assojaba tupinambá: this is the great return of the Tupinambá mantle (coordinated by Juliana Caffé and Juliana Gontijo). São Paulo: Conversas em Gondwana.


TUPINAMBÁ, Glicéria, Jéssica TUPINAMBÁ, and Nathalie PAVELIC, “ ‘Mais do que objetos’: duas lideranças e pesquisadoras Tupinambá em busca de seus ‘ancestrais’ na França”, Revista Argumentos, 21 (1). Available at https://www.periodicos.unimontes.br/index.php/argumentos/article/view/7550/7236 (last access June 2024).


YÉHOUÊTOMÈ, Madina, Sara TASSI, and Saskia COUSIN, 2022, “The amulet of forgetting: we cannot forget and we cannot forgive”, Jahazi Journal: Culture, Arts, Performance, 10 (1).

Related links

The universalist discipline of representation

[1] The authors clarify that the final version of this paper was completed in June 2024. Consequently, it neither considers nor addresses the circumstances or events following the return of the Tupinambá Cloak to Brazil in July 2024. Instead, it focuses on the history and procedures leading up to the successful agreement on the cloak’s restitution, examining the role of diplomacy and alternative dispute resolution methods in bridging the international legal gaps that often hinder negotiations over the restitution of cultural heritage.

[2] The usage of quotation marks is justified as the name was proposed in a preprint paper attempting to describe the fossil (PAL 29241) which was later retracted (Caetano et al. 2023).

[3] For a report and analysis of the process that culminated in the restitution of the “Ubirajara jubatus” fossil to the Plácido Cidade Nuvens Museum in Brazil, see Haertel (2023).

[4] See, e.g., United Nations General Assembly (UNGA). Resolution 70/76 (2015). Available at: https://www.un.org/en/ga/70/resolutions.shtml (accessed 27 April 2024); UNESCO. Resolutions Adopted at the 16th General Conference, Doc. 16C/Resolutions (1970). Available at: https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000114046_fre?posInSet=27&queryId=N-31f32f4a-2c3a-4e10-88c5-9033603a556b (accessed 22 November 2023).

[5] UNESCO Constitution, 4 November 1945, 4 UNTS 275, Arts. 1, 2.

[6] UNESCO. Resolutions Adopted at the 15th General Conference, Doc. 15C/RES/3.343 (1968). http://ulis2.unesco.org/images/0011/001140/114047EO.pdf (accessed 22 November 2023).

[7] For more details, see Bator (1982), O’Keefe (2007), Haertel (2022).

[8] Others are cited in Prott (2012). See also Prott and O’Keefe (1990).

[9] The eleven known Tupinambá Cloaks that survived until the current century will be addressed below (part 3).

[10] As crystallized in the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, 27 January 1980, Art. 28. See also Shaw (2017).

[11] This caveat is also reflected on the 1970 Convention’s Operational Guidelines.

[12] See, for instance, ICPRCP. Report of the 16th Session, Doc. CLT-2010/CONF.203/COM.16/6 REV (2010). https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/ 48223/pf0000192583_eng (accessed 20 November 2022).

[13] See the Statute of the ICPRCP, 1978, Art. 4.

[14] For his account, see Staden (2011).

[15] See the items in the respective online catalogs: Copenhagen (https://samlinger.natmus.dk/es/object/79554; https://samlinger.natmus.dk/es/object/93360; https://samlinger.natmus.dk/es/object/93361; https://samlinger.natmus.dk/es/object/93359; https://samlinger.natmus.dk/es/object/93357), Basel (https://www.mkb.ch/de/services/blog/2023/april-juni/federcape.html), Paris (https://www.quaibranly.fr/fr/explorer-les-collections/base/Work/action/show/notice/120614-cape), Brussels (https://www.carmentis.be:443/eMP/eMuseumPlus?service=ExternalInterface&module=collection&objectId=142482&viewType=detailView), Milan (https://www.ambrosiana.it/en/news/il-mantello-cerimoniale-tupinamba-museosegreto-2019/). The existence of a cloak at the Museo di Storia Naturale in Florence is reported in Buono (2018).

[16] Described and studied in Françoso (2014), the seminal work on Nassau’s collection.

[17] Another high-profile restitution demand was marked by a temporary loan to the country of origin in the early 2000s, before the eventual return the country of origin. Some of the 26 royal treasures of Abomey, restituted from France to the Republic of Benin in 2021, had been temporarily exhibited in Cotonou in 2006, attracting over 275,000 visitors (Bastide 2019). Since the 1990s, activists from Benin and its diaspora – including descendants of King Behanzin – have been calling for the return of the colonial booty from the 1892 sack of Abomey and, in 2016, the government of the Republic of Benin requested the return of its cultural property (Yéhouêtomè et al. 2022).

[18] An article by Roxo (2021) appears to have been of particular importance to the ambassador (Roxo 2023).

[19] See, e.g., Haertel (2023b) and, for further examples, in the context of the Parthenon Marbles, see Haertel (2020).

< Back

Magazine

About

Editorial Team

Authors

Articles Submission

Numbers

Agora

About

Editorial Team

Articles

Sections

Privacy Policy

Iscte-Instituto Universitário de Lisboa
Edifício 4 - Iscte_Conhecimento e Inovação, Sala B1.130 
Av. Forças Armadas, 40 1649-026 Lisboa, Portugal

(+351) 210 464 057
etnografica@cria.org.pt

Financiado pela FCT, I. P. (UIDB/04038/2020 e UIDP/04038/2020)

© 2026 Revista Etnográfica

Magazine

About

Editorial Team

Authors

Articles Submission

Numbers

Agora

About

Editorial Team

Articles

Sections

Privacy Policy

Iscte-Instituto Universitário de Lisboa
Edifício 4 - Iscte_Conhecimento e Inovação, Sala B1.130 
Av. Forças Armadas, 40 1649-026 Lisboa, Portugal

(+351) 210 464 057
etnografica@cria.org.pt

Financiado pela FCT, I. P. (UIDB/04038/2020 e UIDP/04038/2020)

© 2026 Revista Etnográfica