A Bill to amend the British Museum Act 1963 to permit the transfer of artefacts in the British Museum; to confer powers on the Secretary of State to require the transfer of artefacts in specified circumstances; and for connected purposes
At present the British Museum is prevented by statute from disposing of objects in its collections except in very limited circumstances. The Bill’s purpose is to amend the British Museum Act 1963 to enable the British Museum to transfer to another institution, for public exhibition, any object from its collections, in certain circumstances, where public access is guaranteed. Those circumstances are:where the object would be more widely accessible to visitors than in the British Museum where it would be more appropriately displayed in the recipient institution than in the British Museum by reason of its historic linkswhere the object came to form part of the collections of the British Museum in circumstances which make its retention in the collections undesirable or inappropriate. The Bill confers a general power but its sponsor envisages only one situation in which it might realistically apply: to repatriate the Parthenon Marbles to Greece.
House of Commons
9 November 2009
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This Bill would change the British Museum Act 1963 to allow the Museum to transfer artefacts to other institutions for public exhibition in certain circumstances. It would also give the Secretary of State the power to require such transfers in specified situations, for example to improve public access or to place an object with a more appropriate display elsewhere, or when keeping it in the British Museum is undesirable. The sponsor believes the main real-world use would be to repatriate the Parthenon Marbles to Greece.
The bill has had its 1st (26 January 2009) and 2nd readings (15 May 2009) in the Commons and is described as being at the 2nd reading stage.
Generated 21 February 2026
26 Jan 2009
15 May 2009
This Bill was on the Order Paper 16 October, to resume the adjourned Second Reading from 15 May, but there was not enough time for debate on that day.
This Bill was on the Order Paper for a Second Reading on several Fridays before being dropped by its sponsor, Mr Andrew Dismore.
No recorded votes for this bill yet.