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E-raamat: Commons, Plant Breeding and Agricultural Research: Challenges for Food Security and Agrobiodiversity

Edited by , Edited by (Université Grenoble-Alpes, France)
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The joint challenges of population increase, food security and conservation of agrobiodiversity demand a rethink of plant breeding and agricultural research from a different perspective. While more food is undeniably needed, the key question is rather about how to produce it in a way that sustains biological diversity and mitigates climate change.

This book shows how social sciences, and more especially law, can contribute towards reconfiguring current legal frameworks in order to achieving a better balance between the necessary requirements of agricultural innovation and the need for protection of agrobiodiversity. On the assumption that the concept of property can be rethought against the background of the 'right to include', so as to endow others with a common 'right to access' genetic resources, several international instruments and contractual arrangements drawn from the plant-breeding field (including the Convention on Biological Diversity, technology exchange clearing houses and open sources licenses) receive special consideration. In addition, the authors explore the tension between ownership and the free circulation and exchange of germplasm and issues such as genetic resources managed by local and indigenous communities, the ITPGRFA and participatory plant-breeding programmes.

As a whole, the book demonstrates the relevance of the 'Commons' for plant breeding and agricultural innovation.

Acknowledgements and dedications viii
Notes on contributors ix
Table of cases
xviii
Table of statutes and international conventions
xix
List of acronyms and abbreviations
xxiii
Introduction: Commoning the seeds: the future of agrobiodiversity and food security 1(20)
Fabien Girard
Christine Prison
1 Farmers, innovation and intellectual property: current trends and their consequences for food security
21(18)
Graham Dutfield
PART I Access, benefit-sharing and licensing
39(68)
2 Beyond access and benefit-sharing: lessons from the emergence and application of the principle of fair and equitable benefit-sharing in agrobiodiversity governance
41(20)
Elsa Tsioumani
3 Patents and benefit sharing: what can we learn from the Quassia amara lawsuit? What is the problem?
61(13)
Frederic Thomas
4 Open sesame: open source and crops
74(14)
Eric Deibel
5 Creating universal and sustainable access to plants and seeds: the role of clearinghouses, open source licenses, and inclusive patents
88(19)
Geertrui Van Overwalle
PART II Theoretical frameworks
107(38)
6 Private law arrangements for the commons: a new comparative perspective
109(8)
Michele Spano
7 Composing the common world of the local bio-commons in the age of the Anthropocene
117(28)
Fabien Girard
PART III The struggle for the recovery of the shrinking bio-commons
145(50)
8 An anthropological lens on property and access: Gudeman's dialectics of community and market
147(12)
Laura Rival
9 Which scale to understand seed fluxes in small-scale farming societies? Snapshots of sorghum from Africa
159(14)
Eric Garine
Vanesse Labeyrie
Chloe Violon
Jean Wencelius
Christian Leglerc
Christine Raimond
10 Making the difference with a common plant: the recovery of guarana by the Satere-Mawe (Brazil)
173(12)
Geoff Roy Filoche
11 What legal framework for safeguarding traditional seeds? Building the Commons in Colombia
185(10)
Patricia Guzman-Aguilera
PART IV A new vitality for the bio-commons?
195(60)
12 Governing landraces and associated knowledge as a commons: from theory to practice
197(13)
Victoria Reyes-Garcia
Laura Aceituno-Mata
Petra Benyei
Laura Calvet-Mir
Maria Carrascosa-Garcia
Manuel Pardo-De-Santayana
Javier Tardio
13 `Free our seeds!' Strategies of farmers' movements to reappropriate seeds
210(16)
Elise Demeulenaere
14 Geographical indications and the Commons: what matters?
226(8)
Barbara Pick
15 Bio-commons in an industrialised country: a viable option?
234(21)
Susette Biber-Klemm
PART V Thinking global: a global commons for the seed?
255(36)
16 The benefit-sharing mechanisms under the International Treaty: heterogeneity and equity in global resources management
257(15)
Selim Louafi
Daniele Manzella
17 Planting the commons: towards redesigning an equitable global seed exchange
272(19)
Christine Erison
Index 291
Fabien Girard is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Law at Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA), France, and also an Associate Research Fellow, Maison Française dOxford (MFO), UK.

Christine Frison is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow both at the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) with the Law Faculty of the University of Antwerp, Belgium, and at the Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS) with the Institute for Interdisciplinary Research in Legal Sciences (JUR-I) of the Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium.