This book considers the issue of biodiversity in developing
countries in relation to intellectual-property rights, community
rights and human rights. Drawing together a number of case studies
of developing countries rich in biological and genetic resources
including India, South Africa and Brazil, the book examines the
access to PGRs and their utilizations in the contexts of scientific
and commercial oriented activities pursued both in the source and
user countries. Exploring how community rights are protected in
national biodiversity-related regulations and some international
legal instruments, Marcelin Tonye Mahop also discusses the
relationship between community rights and human rights in the
context of biodiversity. The book looks at the issue of bio-piracy,
asking whether this phenomenon should only be seen as a North South
clash, whereby biodiversity rich countries of the Southern
Hemisphere blame developed countries and their actors as its
principal perpetrators. While recognizing that developing
countries' actors play a role in this bio-piracy phenomenon, the
book goes on to suggest alternative measures for the legal
protection of community rights at the national level with the
possibility of national and international enforceability.
Essential reading for students and scholars of
intellectual-property rights, biodiversity regulations and human
rights, this book will also be of great value to researchers and
members of professional organizations working in these subject
areas. National and regional negotiators in the international
processes dealing with the issues covered in the book will find it
a useful tool that can help them to understand various facets of
these processes.
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