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“Biodiversity,
Ownership, and Indigenous Knowledge:
Exploring Legal Frameworks for
Community, Farmers and Intellectual
Property Rights in Africa.”
Ecological Economics. Vol. 53, No. 4
(June, 2005): 493-506.
Abstract
Drafted between 1996 and
2000, the African Union's Model
Legislation for the Protection of
Indigenous Knowledge attempts to redress
the contradictory obligation so the
international instruments affecting
biodiversity, namely the Trade Related
Intellectual Property Rights Agreement
and the Convention on Biological
Diversity, by establishing a new
philosophical justification for
farmers', breeders', and community
rights. By approaching the question of
property rights and farmers' rights from
the perspective of the community, the
African Model Law is able to establish a
legal framework for access to
biodiversity, benefit sharing, and
intellectual property that satisfies the
needs and requirements of African states
by balancing the monopoly rights of
breeders again the rights of indigenous
communities.
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