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E-raamat: Common Pools of Genetic Resources: Equity and Innovation in International Biodiversity Law

Edited by (University of Bremen, Germany), Edited by (University of Bremen, Germany)
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The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) strives for the sustainable and equitable utilization of genetic resources, with the ultimate goal of conserving biodiversity. The CBD and the Nagoya Protocol which has since been elaborated suggest a bilateral model for access to genetic resources and the sharing of benefits from their utilization. There is concern that the bilateral exchange "genetic resource for benefit sharing" could have disappointing results because providers are left out of the process of research and development, benefits are difficult to be traced to sources, and providers owning the same resource may complain of being excluded from benefit sharing. Thus, the CBD objective of full utilization and equitability may become flawed.Common Pools of Genetic Resources: Equity and Innovation in International Biodiversity Law suggests common pools as a complementary approach to bilateralism. This is one of the first books to reply to a number of complex legal questions related to the interpretation and implementation of the Nagoya Protocol. Taking an inductive approach, it describes existing pools and analyzes how they are organized and how they perform in terms of joint R&D and benefit sharing. It presents case studies of the most characteristic types of common pools, provides suggestions for further developing existing pools to cope with the requirements of the CBD and NP and, at the same time uses the clauses these conventions contain to open up for commons approaches.Written by a team of expert academics and practitioners in the field, this innovative book makes a timely and valuable contribution to academic and policy debates in international environmental law, international biodiversity law, intellectual property law, climate law and the law of indigenous populations.
Introduction
1. Common Pools of Genetic Resources and Related
Traditional and Modern Knowledge. An Overview Part 1: Local Approaches
2.
Traditional Knowledge Common Pools: The Story of the Kukula Traditional
Health Practitioners of Bushbuckridge, South Africa
3. Common Pools of TK and
Related Genetic Resources A Case Study of San-Hoodia
4. Reinventing
Traditional Medicine - Pacari and its Struggle Towards Health, Environmental
Protection and Benefit Sharing
5. Guardians of the Seed: The Role of Andean
Farmers in the Caring and Sharing of Agrobiodiveristy Part 2: National
Approaches
6. Genetic Resources Common Pools in Brazil
7. Developing a Common
Pools Strategy for Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture: A Case Study
of Malaysia
8. Common Pools of Traditional Medical Knowledge in China
9.
Common Pools in Aquaculture Exploring Patent Law, ABS and Sui Generis
Options Part 3: Transitional Approaches
10. Practices of Exchanging and
Utilizing GRFA and the ABS Regime
11. Global Scientific Research Commons
under the Nagoya Protocol: Governing Pools of Microbial Genetic Resources
12.
Networks of Ex-Situ Collections in Genetic Resources
13. Biological Data
Banks For Marine Organisms: What They Contain and How They Can Be Used in ABS
Contexts
14. Knowledge Commons, Intellectual Property and the ABS Regime Part
4: International Approaches
15. ABS, Justice and the Nagoya Protocol
16. The
World Health Organizations Pandemic Influenza Preparedness Framework as a
Public Health Resources Pool
17. The Multilateral System of the International
Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources: Lessons and Space for Further Development
18. Exploring Bases for Building Common Pools in Eastern Africa
19. Common
Pools for Marine Genetic Resources A Possible Instrument for a Future
Multilateral Agreement Addressing Marine Biodiversity in Areas Beyond
National Jurisdiction
Dr Evanson Chege Kamau is senior researcher of the Research Centre for European Environmental Law (FEU) at the University of Bremen.



Professor Gerd Winter is Co-Director of the Research Centre for European Environmental Law (FEU) at the University of Bremen.