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Tuesday, Jul 14, 2026

Can UNESCO regulate or control World Heritage Sites?


no

UNESCO cannot place regulations or restrict local actions on World Heritage Sites.

Sites that have “cultural and natural heritage” and “outstanding value to humanity” are chosen by the World Heritage Committee, according to UNESCO.

UNESCO’s 1972 international treaty leaves decision-making for places like the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge to existing local, state and federal authorities.

The constitution says the international body does not threaten the sovereignty of the locality in which the World Heritage Site sits, adding the participating party should not “take any deliberate measures which might damage directly or indirectly the cultural and natural heritage.”

Conservationists have kept the Okefenokee from being developed, most recently in June 2025 when a mining operation ended its bid to extract heavy minerals and sold its land to a conservation group. The refuge has been one of 17 tentative World Heritage sites in the country since 2008.

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