Communities the world over risk losing control over their traditional
knowledge because a UN agency insists on using existing intellectual
property standards for managing access to the information. This is among the
findings of the first detailed comparative study of customary approaches to
protecting and sharing traditional knowledge and biological resources,
published on 29 June 2009 by the International Institute for Environment and
Development (IIED), London. (Find the complete paper in attachment of this
email).



IIED has done a case-study of the Yanadi community of Chittoor and Nellore
districts of Andhra Pradesh, and suggested immediate recognition for
traditional knowledge, ahead of a meeting of the World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO). The study was based on participatory research with
indigenous and local communities in areas of important biodiversity -
including the Lepchas and Limbus in the eastern Himalayas, Yanadi in Andhra
Pradesh, and the Adivasi in Chattishgarh (besides in Kenya, Peru, Panama and
China).



“Yanadi traditional knowledge is on the verge of extinction. The youth are
not interested in learning it, and the status of elders is weakening due to
the extension of government control. The rich traditional knowledge of the
tribe is on the verge of extinction due to lack of recognition” says the
IIED’s study. It argued that the codified systems - Ayurveda, and Unani - in
India have relatively more recognition and patronage. But Yanadi traditional
health knowledge is not recognized by policy makers and is branded as the
“superstitious knowledge of illiterates, making the tribes afraid to come
out openly asserting their expertise”.



The researchers identified key components that international policy on
traditional knowledge and genetic resources should recognise. These include:



   - recognition of collective rights and decision-making;
   - means of sharing benefits equitably among communities;
   - recognition of customary rights over genetic resources such as crop
   varieties that communities have developed;
   - enabling reciprocal access to genetic resources between users and
   communities; and
   - managing external access to traditional knowledge with community
   protocols.
   - They also stressed that ancestral rights to control knowledge cannot be
   extinguished, even if knowledge has been shared with others, because of its
   vital role in survival and identity.


-- 
Regards,

Sudesh Kumar
[email protected]

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