Will Mexico’s push for repatriation continue with the country’s new government?

This article was first published by The Art Newspaper.

Just a week after the new Mexican president, Claudia Sheinbaum, took office in October, the first repatriation ceremony of her administration took place. At the University of Montreal, 84 Mesoamerican green stone axes were returned to Mexico. In the following weeks, colonial doors, a Rafael Coronel painting and 182 Mesoamerican objects were handed back by the US. And on 14 November, Unesco’s International Day against Illicit Trafficking in Cultural Property, 220 artefacts were returned from Argentina, Canada, the US and Switzerland.

Although plans for these restitutions were under way prior to Sheinbaum’s ascent to power, they raise the question of what can be expected from Mexico’s new leader, especially in the wake of her predecessor’s apparent zeal for bringing antiquities home.

Between 2018 and 2024, under former president Andrés Manuel López Obrador, around 14,000 objects were returned to Mexico. This was due in part to the #MiPatrimonioNoSeVende (my heritage is not for sale) social-media campaign, promoting the return of illegally trafficked cultural property.