2000
DOI: 10.1086/649331
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Bio-Prospecting or Bio-Piracy: Intellectual Property Rights and Biodiversity in a Colonial and Postcolonial Context

Abstract: Despite the rhetoric of decolonization following World War II, developing countries are, if anything, more dependent now on the science and technology of the developed world than they were in colonial times. This has led some critics to describe their situation as "neo-colonial." This paper will explore the issue in relation to the biotechnology industry, and to the 1993 United Nations Convention on Biodiversity. This convention challenged the assumption that the earth's biological and genetic resources are pa… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Finally, in the scenario where R&D is found to be successful, the private company incurs additional costs to apply for approval from the regulatory agency, and royalties. (Merson 2000). In 2002, an estimated 2.4 billion dollars were obtained from global sales of marine biotechnology products (Ruth 2006).…”
Section: 3drug Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Finally, in the scenario where R&D is found to be successful, the private company incurs additional costs to apply for approval from the regulatory agency, and royalties. (Merson 2000). In 2002, an estimated 2.4 billion dollars were obtained from global sales of marine biotechnology products (Ruth 2006).…”
Section: 3drug Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A well-known presented case is, for instance, the bioprospecting contract between the INBio- and commercial agriculture traditionally depend upon plant genetic resources, but biotechnological companies and pharmaceutical companies always acquire material as raw samples, extracts from plant genetic resources or 'value-added' genetic resources (Ten Kate and Laird 1999;2000). Table 1 contains a review of the most important provisions in a sample of 8 selected contracts, stipulated world-wide.…”
Section: Bioprospecting Contracts: Some Stylised Factsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The emergence of multinational corporations as dominant players in global pharmaceutical markets has led to standardisation and an accentuation of inequalities (Merson, 2000). In many cases, corporations use IPR and licensing agreements to disguise the structuring of a global knowledge cartel to effectively dominate markets rather than being controlled by them.…”
Section: The Pharmaceutical Industrymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…15 12 Lyons 1992;Echenberg 2001;Tilley 2004. 13 Merson 2000;Schiebinger 2004. 14 Bloom and Walton 1957;Eisner 1990;Reid et al (eds) 1993;Shiva et al (eds) 1999.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%