Governing digitally integrated genetic resources, data, and literature : global intellectual property strategies for a redesigned microbial research commons /
"The free exchange of microbial genetic information is an established public good, facilitating research on medicines, agriculture, and climate change. However, over the past quarter-century, access to genetic resources has been hindered by intellectual property claims from developed countries...
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Main Authors: | |
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Group Author: | ; |
Published: |
Cambridge University Press,
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Publisher Address: | New York, NY : |
Publication Dates: | 2016. |
Literature type: | Book |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Summary: |
"The free exchange of microbial genetic information is an established public good, facilitating research on medicines, agriculture, and climate change. However, over the past quarter-century, access to genetic resources has been hindered by intellectual property claims from developed countries under the World Trade Organization's TRIPS Agreement (1994) and by claims of sovereign rights from developing countries under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) (1992). In this volume, the authors examine the scientific community's responses to these obstacles and advise policymakers on how t |
Carrier Form: | xxii, 655 pages ; 23 cm |
Bibliography: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
ISBN: |
9781107021747 110702174X |
Index Number: | QH442 |
CLC: | Q78 |
Call Number: | Q78/R352 |
Contents: | Machine generated contents note: 1. Uncertain legal status of microbial genetic resources in a conflicted geopolitical environment; Part I. International Regulation of Genetic Resources and the Assault on Scientific Research: 2. Between public and private goods: emergence of the transnational research commons for plant and microbial genetic resources; 3. Tightening the regulatory grip: from the convention on biological diversity in 1992 to the Nagoya protocol in 2010; Part II. Preserving the Public Research Functions of Microbial Genetic Resources After the Nagoya Protocol: 4. The existing m |