| About the author |
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xi | |
| Preface |
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xiii | |
| Acknowledgements |
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xv | |
| Acronyms and abbreviations |
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xvii | |
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1 Agrobiodiversity: a concept under construction |
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1 | (14) |
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2 Agrobiodiversity and food security, nutrition, health, and environmental sustainability |
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15 | (8) |
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3 Agrobiodiversity and climate change |
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23 | (20) |
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4 Seed laws: the paradigms of industrial agriculture, traditional/local agricultural systems, and agrobiodiversity |
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43 | (34) |
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Seed laws in Latin American countries |
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47 | (3) |
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The Brazilian seed law and traditional, local, and creole plant varieties |
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50 | (9) |
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The European directives on conservation varieties, the Italian regional laws, and seed laws in Switzerland and Norway |
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59 | (18) |
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5 The Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants and the UPOV system: the protection of intellectual property rights over plant varieties |
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77 | (28) |
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77 | (3) |
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The UPOV Convention: main concepts |
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80 | (2) |
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The Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) of the World Trade Organization (WTO) |
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82 | (3) |
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US patents on plant varieties: utility patents and plant patents |
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85 | (3) |
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No European patents for essentially biological breeding processes: the broccoli and the tomato cases |
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88 | (3) |
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The 1978 and 1991 Acts of the UPOV Convention: main differences |
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91 | (3) |
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Some countries that said no to UPOV |
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94 | (4) |
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Patents and the UPOV system: compulsory cross-licenses |
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98 | (7) |
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6 Access and benefit-sharing laws and plant genetic resources for food and agriculture: the international legal regime |
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105 | (62) |
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Historical background: FAO conferences in 1961, 1967, and 1973 - discussions on ex situ and in situ conservation of plant genetic resources |
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105 | (5) |
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The International Undertaking on Plant Genetic Resources |
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110 | (3) |
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The Convention on Biological Diversity and agriculture |
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113 | (5) |
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The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture |
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118 | (30) |
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The Nagoya Protocol and its interfaces with the FAO Treaty and other specialized access and benefit-sharing agreements |
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148 | (19) |
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7 Options for the implementation of the international treaty on plant genetic resources for food and agriculture at the national level |
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167 | (33) |
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Access and benefit-sharing: in situ plant genetic resources for food and agriculture |
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167 | (2) |
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Access and benefit-sharing regimes for plant genetic resources for food and agriculture not included in the multilateral system and national benefit-sharing funds |
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169 | (2) |
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Plant genetic resources for food and agriculture held by state and provincial institutions |
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171 | (1) |
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The special legal regime of plant genetic resources found in the territories of Indigenous peoples and other ethnic minorities |
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171 | (2) |
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Brazilian access and benefit-sharing law and plant genetic resources for food and agriculture |
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173 | (11) |
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Peruvian access and benefit-sharing law and plant genetic resources for food and agriculture |
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184 | (7) |
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A comparison between the Brazilian and the Peruvian access and benefit-sharing laws, in relation to plant genetic resources for food and agriculture |
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191 | (9) |
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200 | (40) |
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200 | (10) |
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Farmers' rights to save, use, exchange, and sell farm-saved seeds and other propagating materials |
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210 | (2) |
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Use of commercial plant varieties as a source of diversity in farmers' breeding: extending the breeders' privilege to farmers |
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212 | (3) |
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Protection of traditional knowledge and collective benefit-sharing mechanisms |
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215 | (4) |
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Participatory plant breeding |
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219 | (4) |
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Farmers' political participation |
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223 | (2) |
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India's Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers' Rights Act and the new Indian Seeds Bill |
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225 | (4) |
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Farmers' rights in the African Model Law and in the Ethiopian Proclamations |
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229 | (11) |
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9 Animal genetic resources for food and agriculture: access and benefit-sharing and livestock keepers' rights |
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240 | (17) |
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10 The open source software movement, the commons movement and seeds: what they have in common - biological open source and protected commons |
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257 | (14) |
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11 Agrobiodiversity and cultural heritage law |
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271 | (30) |
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Cultivated plants as cultural artifacts: "agriculture" |
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271 | (1) |
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The UNESCO Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage: interfaces with agrobiodiversity and food diversity |
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271 | (5) |
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Registry of Intangible Cultural Heritage and Agrobiodiversity-Rich Systems in the Brazilian Amazon: a new perspective for the safeguarding of traditional agricultural systems |
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276 | (5) |
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Recognition of traditional knowledge associated with maize diversity and of local foods as intangible cultural heritage in Peru |
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281 | (2) |
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The UNESCO Convention for the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage and the concept of "cultural landscapes" |
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283 | (4) |
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"Cultural landscapes" and the safeguarding of traditional agricultural systems in the Philippines, Cuba, Hungary, Sweden, and Brazil |
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287 | (2) |
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Globally Important Ingenious Agricultural Heritage Systems (GIAHS): general overview of pilot agroecosystems in Peru, Chile, the Philippines, Magreb (Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia), China, Kenya, and Tanzania |
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289 | (3) |
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GIAHS, Amazonian dark earths, and agrobiodiversity |
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292 | (9) |
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12 Agrobiodiversity and protected areas |
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301 | (13) |
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13 Geographical indications for agrobiodiversity products?: case studies in France, Mexico, and Brazil |
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314 | (21) |
| Conclusions |
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335 | (8) |
| Index |
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343 | |