1st Edition

Intellectual Property, Biogenetic Resources and Traditional Knowledge

By Graham Dutfield Copyright 2004
    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    Biogenetic resources - the critical biological and chemical materials that underpin so much of medicine, both modern and traditional, agriculture, and wider economic activity in so many fields - are at the centre of heated debate regarding their use, development, and ownership, and the issues of ethics and equity that impinge on all of these factors. This book is a comprehensive examination of the key issues, institutions and ideologies in this area, presenting definitions and explanations of the fundamentals of intellectual property rights (IPRs), biogenetic resources and traditional knowledge. It uses the insights from this to build a picture of how these factors interact in practice, bringing to the surface issues such as: the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity, benefit sharing from the commercial use of biodiversity, biotechnological innovation and the transfer of technology, agriculture, food security, rural development, health and international justice. Part 1 describes the relevant international IPR laws, highlights the extent to which modern commerce depends on such resources, and traces the way in which modern IPR law has evolved to accommodate this dependence. Part 2 shows how stronger IPR protection in the area of life science innovation has given rise to controversies such as 'biopiracy', 'terminator' genes and genetic uniformity. Part 3 focuses on traditional knowledge, its nature, its importance, and the applicability of IPR-style protection. Part 4 covers the international negotiation and policy-making of the WTO, WIPO and CBD and the legislative initiatives of national governments of Asia, Africa and Latin America. Finally, Part 5 focuses on two developing country case studies - of India and Kenya - assessing whether they will be able to gain economic benefit from development of their natural resources within the current regulatory system and whether this will encourage the conservation and sustainable use of the resource base. With its multidisciplinary approach and breadth of coverage, this book will appeal both to those new to the subject and to those with professional and specialist interest, including students, academics, legal practitioners, government policy-makers and the private sector.

    Part 1: Knowledge, Property and Trade  Sovereignty, Common Heritage and Property Rights  Biotechnology and the Expanding Boundaries of Intellectual Property Protection  The International Law of Biogenetic Resources and Intellectual Property  Part 2: Conflicts and Controversies  National Sovereignty, Benefit Sharing and the Patenting of Life  Biopiracy  Environmental Impacts  Agriculture, Food Security and Nutrition  Beyond Intellectual property: Technological Protection Systems  Life Science Innovation, Biotechnology Transfer and Developing Countries  Part 3: Protecting Traditional Knowledge  Traditional Knowledge and the Intellectual Property System  Alternative Approaches to Traditional Knowledge Protection  Part 4: Forums, Processes and Initiatives  International Forums and Processes  Government and Regional Initiatives  Part 5: National Case Studies: India  Kenya  Lessons of the Case Studies

    Biography

    Graham Dutfield is senior research fellow at Queen Mary, University of London, UK. He is co-editor of Trading in Knowledge (Earthscan, 2003) and author of Intellectual Property Rights, Trade and Biodiversity (Earthscan, 2000).