Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Mali made a law to stop people from digging up and exporting terra-cotta statues from Djenne-jeno, but it couldn’t enforce the law, so looters took many figures in the 1980s and valuable archaeological information was lost. UNESCO and many countries say artifacts belong to the culture where they were made and often ban export, which sounds right, but strict bans can backfire because people may hide or sell finds without recording where they came from (recorded items can be seized). The author suggests that if Mali had worked with UNESCO to license digs, teach locals to record finds, require registration before objects left sites, and tax exports to buy museum pieces, this imperfect system would probably have saved more objects and information than what actually happened.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the author's concluding hypothetical (paragraph 4) that contrasts unenforceable prohibitions with a system of licensing, recording, education, and taxation; the author concludes an imperfectly followed regulatory system would likely have been preferable. Choose the option matching that view.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.The author of the passage would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements about regulations governing the trade in cultural antiquities in countries like Mali?
Correct Answer
C
The author explicitly proposes a regulatory system (licensing, education, recording/registration, and a tax) and then acknowledges imperfection but still treats that system as preferable: "Suppose that from the beginning, Mali had been helped by UNESCO ... by licensing excavations and educating people to recognize that such artifacts have greater value when they are removed carefully from the earth with accurate records of location." "Suppose Mali had required that objects be recorded and registered before leaving the excavation site, and had imposed a tax on exported objects to fund acquisitions of important pieces for the national museum." The author then allows that "Some people would still have avoided the rules. But would this not have been better than what actually happened?" These sentences support choice C — regulations can be beneficial even if not everyone strictly complies.
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