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Analysis Of Options For Implementing Disclosure Of Origin Requirements In Intellectual Property Applications, Joshua D. Sarnoff, Carlos M. Correa Jan 2005

Analysis Of Options For Implementing Disclosure Of Origin Requirements In Intellectual Property Applications, Joshua D. Sarnoff, Carlos M. Correa

Traditional Knowledge and Culture

In 2002, the Conference of the Parties (COP) of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) at its Sixth Meeting adopted the Bonn Guidelines to address access to genetic resources and fair and equitable benefit-sharing arising from use of those resources. In the Bonn Guidelines, the CBD COP invited Parties and governments to encourage disclosure of the country of origin of genetic resources and of associated traditional knowledge in applications for intellectual property where the subject matter of the application concerns or makes use of such knowledge in its development. Since 2002, various proposals to facilitate or to mandate such “disclosure …


Indigenous Peoples And Intellectual Property, Stephen M. Mcjohn, Lorie Graham Jan 2005

Indigenous Peoples And Intellectual Property, Stephen M. Mcjohn, Lorie Graham

Suffolk University Law School Faculty Works

This paper, following on Michael F. Brown's Who Owns Native Culture?, suggests that intellectual property law, negotiation, and human rights precepts can work together to address indigenous claims to heritage protection. Granting intellectual property rights in such spheres as traditional knowledge and folklore does not threaten the public domain in the same way that expansion of intellectual property rights in more commercial spheres does. It is not so much a question of the public domain versus corporate and indigenous interests, as it is a question of the impact corporate interests have had on the indigenous claims. Indeed indigenous peoples' claims …


Traditional Knowledge & Intellectual Property: A Trips-Compatible Approach, Daniel J. Gervais Jan 2005

Traditional Knowledge & Intellectual Property: A Trips-Compatible Approach, Daniel J. Gervais

Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications

Should intellectual property provide a means for strengthening the range of incentives that local communities need for conserving and developing genetic resources and traditional knowledge (TK)? If so, how and at what cost? To be able to suggest answers, a number of issues must be resolved. They are the focus of the Article. First, one must build, and then cross, a cultural bridge to explain current forms of intellectual property to holders of traditional knowledge, including definitional efforts to determine the nature and depth of the overlap(s). This achieves a dual objective: it allows intellectual property circles to understand and …


Half-Human Creatures, Plants & Indigenous Peoples: Musings On Ramifications Of Western Notions Of Intellectual Property And The Newman-Rifkin Attempt To Patent A Theoretical Half-Human Creature, Valerie J. Phillips Jan 2005

Half-Human Creatures, Plants & Indigenous Peoples: Musings On Ramifications Of Western Notions Of Intellectual Property And The Newman-Rifkin Attempt To Patent A Theoretical Half-Human Creature, Valerie J. Phillips

Santa Clara High Technology Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Tradition, Tech, And Transformation: Information Technologies And The Intellectual Property Of Indigenous Peoples, Sam Grey Dec 2004

Tradition, Tech, And Transformation: Information Technologies And The Intellectual Property Of Indigenous Peoples, Sam Grey

Sam Grey

Changes brought about by the globalization of laws and markets, and the geometric expansion of technological innovation, make intellectual property issues nebulous and mercurial, to the point that keeping pace with changes in the field is a full-time pursuit requiring a high degree of skill and dedication. For nations-within-nations, as is the status of most Native groups worldwide, intellectual property presents a particularly difficult legal and political problem, as indeed intellectual property rights (IPR) regimes challenge the sovereignty of even the strongest and most 'modern' of nation-states. Authorities on the protection of traditional knowledge (TK), resources, and cultural expressions assert …