A Regional Review of Genetic Resource Access and Benefit Sharing – Key Issues and Research Gaps

Author:

Morrison Clare1,Humphries Fran2,Lawson Charles3

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Planetary Health and Food Security, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia

2. School of Law, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

3. Law Futures Centre, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia

Abstract

Countries are increasingly using access and benefit sharing (ABS) as a legal mechanism to support the conservation and sustainable use of the world’s biological diversity. ABS regulates collection and/or use of genetic resources/traditional knowledge and sharing benefits from their use with the provider. The purpose of this review is to assess the trends, biases and gaps of ABS literature using a regional comparative approach about the key topics of concern between each region. It analyses four key topic groupings: (1) implementation of international, regional and national ABS policy and law; (2) intellectual property and ABS; (3) traditional knowledge; and (4) research, development and commercialisation. Findings included gaps in: (1) analysing effectiveness of national level implementation; (2) addressing apparent conflicts between support for intellectual property promoting exclusivity for traditional knowledge and challenges to intellectual property exclusivity for patents; (3) examining traditional knowledge of local communities (in contrast to Indigenous Peoples); and (4) lack of practical examples that quantify benefit sharing from research and commercialisation outcomes. We conclude that future research addressing the identified gaps and biases can promote more informed understanding among stakeholders about the ABS concept and whether it is capable of delivering concrete biological conservation, sustainable use and equity outcomes.

Publisher

IOS Press

Subject

Law,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

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