非洲植物资源的生物剽窃与可持续的传统知识体系

Q2 Social Sciences Global Journal of Comparative Law Pub Date : 2019-09-25 DOI:10.1163/2211906x-00802003
Patrick Agejoh Ageh, N. Lall
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引用次数: 8

摘要

非洲植物资源与传统社区之间的关系是不可分割的。几个世纪以来,土著社区在健康和食品方面一直依赖其文化创新和做法。植物资源是非洲土著社区传统知识体系的一部分。殖民主义和对非洲的争夺导致西方科学家和跨国制药公司对植物资源进行生物勘探。他们在非洲各地的偏远地区寻找“外来植物新药”,以获得利润或专利权。技术的出现见证了许多植物资源的非法开采和商业化(生物剽窃)。传统的知识体系正在被侵蚀,而忽视了知识所有者可持续管理知识的福利。本文着眼于挑战,以及现有的法律框架,以评估其是否足以确保非洲传统知识体系的可持续性。
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Biopiracy of Plant Resources and Sustainable Traditional Knowledge System in Africa
The relationship between plant resources and traditional communities in Africa is inseparable. For centuries, indigenous communities have been depending on their cultural innovations and practices for health and food. Plant resources are part of the traditional knowledge system of indigenous communities in Africa. Colonialism and the scramble for Africa led to plant resources being opened to bioprospecting by western scientists and multinational pharmaceutical firms. They engage in secluded locations around Africa in order to find ‘new drugs from exotic plants’ for profit-making or patent rights. The advent of technology has witnessed a lot of illegal exploitation and commercialization of plant resources (biopiracy). The traditional knowledge system is being eroded with disregard to the welfare of the owners of the knowledge to sustainably manage it. The paper looks at the challenges, the existing legal framework to appreciate if it’s adequate to ensure the sustainability of the traditional knowledge system in Africa.
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来源期刊
Global Journal of Comparative Law
Global Journal of Comparative Law Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: The Global Journal of Comparative Law is a peer reviewed periodical that provides a dynamic platform for the dissemination of ideas on comparative law and reports on developments in the field of comparative law from all parts of the world. In our contemporary globalized world, it is almost impossible to isolate developments in the law in one jurisdiction or society from another. At the same time, what is traditionally called comparative law is increasingly subsumed under aspects of International Law. The Global Journal of Comparative Law therefore aims to maintain the discipline of comparative legal studies as vigorous and dynamic by deepening the space for comparative work in its transnational context.
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