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“Contested Ownership:
TRIPs, CBD and Implications for African
Biodiversity.” Perspectives on
Global Development and Technology.
Vol. 1 No. 3-4 (December 2002), pp.
294-321.
Abstract
The increasing
importance of biodiversity sparked by
the emergence of modern biotechnology
has ignited tensions between
transnational corporations and local
communities. Conflicting international
instruments governing access to and
control over biodiversity exacerbates
disputes over control of local
bioresources and knowledge. While there
is some overlap between the
Trade-Related Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPs) Agreement and the
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD),
the agreements provide conflicting
policy prescriptions regarding trade in
biodiversity. The tension derives from
the fundamentally different ontologies
on which the agreements are based. In
Southern Africa, governments are
attempting to reconcile the agreements
through national frameworks based o the
OAU/AU Model Legislation. The success of
such efforts will depend on the ability
of the state to guarantee the rights of
indigenous communities to control
biodiversity and the participation of
such communities in the development of
national legislation. In the end, such
efforts depend on the rearticulation of
the relationship between public and
private spheres.
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