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Published byPosy Murphy Modified over 9 years ago
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INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS AND TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE Professor Bernard Martin
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UMUNTU NGUMUNTU NGABANTU
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Introduction Framework Change Current Bill Protection issues Conclusions
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Framework Individualist v Collectivist Environmental cataclysm Corporate Social Responsibility
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Current Bill (i) Who (ii) Owns (iii) What (iv) For how long?”
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Who owns Difficulty identifying “owner” Communal ownership – formal / existing IP: Erven Warnkink v Townend – “advocaat” Geographic indications Multiple holders
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What? “Tradition-based literary, artistic or scientific works; performances; inventions; scientific discoveries; designs; marks, names and symbols; undisclosed information; and, all other tradition-based innovations and creations resulting from intellectual activity in the industrial, scientific, literary or artistic fields.” - WIPO
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Variety - TK forms ≈ IP: Copyright Patents Trade marks Designs Performers rights Trade secrets
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TK: IP and Property Same elements - formal / existing IP Laugh It Off case - property
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Protection Issues Defensive or offensive –Prevention –Sui generis –No benefit –Public domain depletion
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Public domain –Western notion denies ownership deriving from immemorial user –Exclusive to community Time limitation –Connected to removal from public domain –Not universal Proof – Philippines Law
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Patents –Novelty – not in public domain Copyright –Material form – not universal –Identifiable author – anonymous works Distinctive (trade) marks –Marketable goods (Ethiopian coffee) –Collective & certification marks Protection – non-traditional use
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Conclusion Harmonisation of paradigms possible Environmental change Traditional knowledge – survival Amendment principles not alien Identification of owners Examples of communal ownership exist TK forms parallel to conventional IP
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Sui generis – no financial rewards Public domain – no removal justifies perpetual rights Proof possible Novelty exists – public domain Copyright in non-material works Existing TK trade marks
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IP or sui generis – details: benefits & articulation Harmonisation possible New paradigm – ex Africa semper aliquid nova Thank you! Nyabonga! Dankie!
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