ISBN-13: 9781032433998 / Angielski
This book addresses the issue of Indigenous participation in genetic resource access and benefit-sharing and associated traditional knowledge.
This book addresses the issue of Indigenous participation in genetic resource access and benefit-sharing and associated traditional knowledge.
Genetic resources from nature are increasingly used in global biodiscovery research and development, but they often use Indigenous peoples’ traditional knowledge without their consent and without sharing the benefit. The Nagoya Protocol is an instrument of the Convention on Biological Diversity intended to ensure that traditional knowledge is used with Indigenous approval and entails benefit sharing on mutually agreed terms. Many countries with significant Indigenous populations have signed the Nagoya Protocol and are currently grappling with implementation of its provisions. This book takes up a case study of Australia to demonstrate how Indigenous community governance in settler states can serve as a path to implementing the Nagoya Protocol. Australia’s access and benefit-sharing framework is globally hailed as best-practice, offering global lessons for other countries implementing the Nagoya Protocol. Focusing on two Indigenous community organisations in Australia, the book establishes a unique evaluative framework for analysing and differentiating the arrangements used by Indigenous communities for facilitating decision-making related to traditional knowledge.
This book will appeal to scholars working in the areas of international environmental law, human rights, biotechnology law, and on Indigenous legal issues; as well as those directly engaged in implementing access and benefit-sharing measures and developing law reform strategies.