Safeguarding Traditional Knowledge in commercialisation of native plants

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Presentation by Slade Lee to the Queensland Bushfoods Association 4th Conference, 21 September in Brisbane

Transcript of Safeguarding Traditional Knowledge in commercialisation of native plants

Cooperative Research Centre for Remote Economic Participation

Safeguarding Traditional Knowledge in commercialisation of native plants

Principal Research Leader – Assoc. Prof. L. Slade LEE

Plant Business Project

Safeguarding Traditional Knowledge in commercialisation of native plants

Acknowledging: Yuggera (Jagera) & Turrubal group and Quandamooka people

Plant Business Project

Safeguarding Traditional Knowledge in commercialisation of native plants

the case: • legal • moral & ethical • reconciliation • attribution

the mechanism: • laws • conventions • marketing

the aim: • raise questions about the associated issues of hereditary

custodianship and Traditional Knowledge

Plant Business Project

Safeguarding Traditional Knowledge in commercialisation of native plants

the issue: • Traditional Knowledge

◦ value (Indigenous cf. Western) ◦ utility & spiritual ◦ customary rights

• Hereditary custodianship ◦ acknowledgement ◦ consent ◦ protection ◦ benefit-sharing

• Principles ◦ commercialisation ◦ moral & ethical ◦ reconciliation ◦ attribution ◦ approaches

Plant Business Project

Safeguarding Traditional Knowledge in commercialisation of native plants

• traditional significance ◦ utility ◦ totemic ◦ cultural (stories, dance, art)

• commercialisation – utility only ◦ exploitation of a resource ◦ utilisation & processing ◦ connectedness with tradition – bush foods : equivalent (macadamia) : processed (bush tomato) – essential oils & extracts: refined (tea tree) – derivatives: purified & modified (Marjarla) – non-utilised: cultural nonetheless (ornamental natives)

the question of attribution:

Plant Business Project

Safeguarding Traditional Knowledge in commercialisation of native plants

it’s the law: • IP Law vs. Traditional Knowledge & Customary Law

◦ defined term cf. in perpetuity ◦ defined owner cf. collective ownership ◦ defined in writing cf. preserved in oral culture

• IP Law and customary heritage rights ◦ fundamentally incompatible ◦ do not acknowledge each other ◦ not a satisfactory mechanism for safeguarding

Aboriginal Traditional Knowledge or cultural heritage ◦ but are under review by IP Australia

Plant Business Project

Safeguarding Traditional Knowledge in commercialisation of native plants

it’s the other laws: • innovative legal approaches to safeguarding cultural heritage

• disadvantages ◦ legalese is confronting ◦ expensive ◦ complex

◦ the ‘many irons’ approach – Janke, Drahos ◦ sui generis – Drahos

◦ finessing the law – Martin & Jeffery

Plant Business Project

Safeguarding Traditional Knowledge in commercialisation of native plants

• market-based approaches to safeguarding cultural heritage ▫ governed by law:

◦ Trademarks ◦ Certification ◦ Registered Designs ◦ Geographical Indications

▫ cooperative and collective: ◦ FairTrade ◦ trade secrets

it’s the other ways:

Plant Business Project

Safeguarding Traditional Knowledge in commercialisation of native plants

• disadvantages ◦ trades on goodwill ◦ legal enforceability

it’s the other ways:

• advantages ◦ inexpensive ◦ straightforward

Plant Business Project

Project Partners

Partner Student Supervisors

Advisory Group Others

Thank you -

Discussion