Global Biopiracy: Patents, Plants, and Indigenous Knowledge

Pirmais vāks
UBC Press, 2007 - 336 lappuses

Legal control and ownership of plants and traditional knowledge of the uses of plants (TKUP) is a vexing issue. The phenomenon of appropriation of plants and TKUP, otherwise known as biopiracy, thrives in a cultural milieu where non-Western forms of knowledge are systemically marginalized and devalued as "folk knowledge" or characterized as inferior. Global Biopiracy rethinks the role of international law and legal concepts, the Western-based, Eurocentric patent systems of the world, and international agricultural research institutions as they affect legal ownership and control of plants and TKUP.

The analysis is cast in various contexts and examined at multiple levels. The first deals with the Eurocentric character of the patent system, international law, and institutions. The second involves the cultural and economic dichotomy between the industrialized Western world and the westernizing, developing world. The third level of analysis considers the phenomenal loss of human cultures and plant diversity. Exhaustively researched and eloquently argued, Global Biopiracy sheds new light on a contentious topic. The impact of intellectual property law on indigenous peoples and informal or traditional innovations is a field of study that currently includes only a handful of scholars. Biopiracy will be an invaluable resource for students, teachers, and legal practitioners.

No grāmatas satura

Saturs

1 Introduction
1
2 Patents Indigenous and Traditional Knowledge and Biopiracy
9
3 Implications of Biopiracy for Biological and Cultural Diversity
50
4 The Appropriative Aspects of Biopiracy
87
5 Patent Regimes and Biopiracy
119
6 Conclusion
179
Notes
201
Selected Bibliography
280
Index
305
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Par autoru (2007)

Ikechi Mgbeoji is a professor at Osgoode Hall Law School, York University, and the author of Collective Insecurity: The Liberian Crisis, Unilateralism, and Global Order, also published by UBC Press.

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