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Traditional knowledge

Traditional knowledge (TK), indigenous knowledge (IK),[1] folk knowledge, and local knowledge, generally refer to knowledge systems embedded in the cultural traditions of regional, indigenous, or local communities.[2] According to the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and the United Nations (UN), traditional knowledge and traditional cultural expressions (TCE) are both types of indigenous knowledge.[3]

Traditional knowledge includes types of knowledge about traditional technologies of subsistence (e.g. tools and techniques for hunting or agriculture), midwifery, ethnobotany and ecological knowledge, traditional medicine, celestial navigation, craft skills, ethnoastronomy, climate, and others. These kinds of knowledge, crucial for subsistence and survival, are generally based on accumulations of empirical observation and on interaction with the environment.

In many cases, traditional knowledge has been passed for generations from person to person, as an oral tradition. Some forms of traditional knowledge find expression in culture, stories, legends, folklore, rituals, songs, and laws,[4][5][6] languages, songlines, dance, games, mythology, designs, visual art and architecture, falling under the category of traditional cultural expressions.[3]

Characteristics and related concepts edit

 
Tribal Colleges preserve and pass on both general knowledge and, through employing community Elders, traditional Indigenous knowledge. (Leech Lake Tribal College, Minnesota)

A report of the International Council for Science (ICSU) Study Group on Science and Traditional Knowledge characterises traditional knowledge as:[7]

a cumulative body of knowledge, know-how, practices and representations maintained and developed by peoples with extended histories of interaction with the natural environment. These sophisticated sets of understandings, interpretations and meanings are part and parcel of a cultural complex that encompasses language, naming and classification systems, resource use practices, ritual, spirituality and worldview.

Traditional knowledge typically distinguishes one community from another. In some communities, traditional knowledge takes on personal and spiritual meanings. Traditional knowledge can also reflect a community's interests. Some communities depend on their traditional knowledge for survival. Traditional knowledge regarding the environment, such as taboos, proverbs and cosmological knowledge systems, may provide a conservation ethos for biodiversity preservation.[8] This is particularly true of traditional environmental knowledge, which refers to a "particular form of place-based knowledge of the diversity and interactions among plant and animal species, landforms, watercourses, and other qualities of the biophysical environment in a given place".[9] As an example of a society with a wealth of traditional ecological knowledge (TEK), the South American Kayapo people, have developed an extensive classification system of ecological zones of the Amazonian tropical savannah (i.e., campo / cerrado) to better manage the land.[10]

Some social scientists conceptualise knowledge within a naturalistic framework and emphasize the gradation of recent knowledge into knowledge acquired over many generations. These accounts use terms like adaptively acquired knowledge, socially constructed knowledge, and other terms that emphasize the social aspects of knowledge.[11] Local knowledge and traditional knowledge may be thought of as distinguished by the length of time they have existed, from decades to centuries or millennia.

Indigenous knowledge or techniques (ITKs) are the treasure troves of ancient wisdom and are developed through trial-and-error, experiences gained over the centuries, and are time tested but, generally not substantiated by any scientific evidences. However, most of the ITKs were known to be scientifically effective and valid.[12]

Scholarly studies in the naturalistic tradition[clarification needed] demonstrate that traditional knowledge is not a natural category, and may reflect power struggles and relationships for land, resources and social control rather than adherence to a claimed ancestry or heritage.[citation needed]

On the other hand, indigenous and local communities themselves may perceive traditional knowledge very differently. The knowledge of indigenous and local communities is often embedded in a cosmology, and any distinction between "intangible" knowledge and physical things can become blurred. Indigenous peoples often say that indigenous knowledge is holistic, and cannot be meaningfully separated from the lands and resources available to them. Traditional knowledge in such cosmologies is inextricably bound to ancestors, and ancestral lands.[citation needed] Knowledge may not be acquired by naturalistic trial and error, but through direct revelation through conversations with "the creator", spirits, or ancestors. Chamberlin (2003) writes of a Gitksan elder from British Columbia confronted by a government land-claim: "If this is your land," he asked, "where are your stories?"[13]

Indigenous and local communities often do not have strong traditions of ownership over knowledge that resemble the modern forms of private ownership. Many have clear traditions of custodianship over knowledge, and customary law may guide who may use different kinds of knowledge at particular times and places, and specify obligations that accompany the use of knowledge. For example, a hunter might be permitted to kill an animal only to feed the community, and not to feed himself. From an indigenous perspective, misappropriation and misuse of knowledge may be offensive to traditions, and may have spiritual and physical repercussions in indigenous cosmological systems. Consequently, indigenous and local communities argue that others' use of their traditional knowledge warrants respect and sensitivity. Critics of traditional knowledge, however, see such demands for "respect" as an attempt to prevent unsubstantiated beliefs from being subjected to the same scrutiny as other knowledge-claims.[citation needed] This has particular significance for environmental management because the spiritual component of "traditional knowledge" can justify any activity, including the unsustainable harvesting of resources.

Terminology edit

 
The art of Diné weaving is part of the traditional knowledge of the Navajo people.

Traditional Knowledge (TK) and Traditional Cultural Expressions (TCE) are both types of Indigenous Knowledge (IK), according to the definitions and terminology used in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) and by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). [14]

The phrase "traditional cultural expressions" is used by WIPO to refer to "any form of artistic and literary expression in which traditional culture and knowledge are embodied. They are transmitted from one generation to the next, and include handmade textiles, paintings, stories, legends, ceremonies, music, songs, rhythms and dance."[15]

WIPO negotiates international legal protection of traditional cultural expressions through the Intergovernmental Committee on Intellectual Property and Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge, and Folklore (IGC). [16] During the committee's sessions, representatives of indigenous and local communities host panels relating to the preservation of traditional knowledge. [17]

Leading international authority on Indigenous cultural and intellectual property, Australian lawyer Terri Janke, says that within Australian Indigenous communities (comprising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples), "the use of the word 'traditional' tends not to be preferred as it implies that Indigenous culture is locked in time".[3]

Property rights edit

 
Indigenous lands are endangered by climate change. Many Indigenous Nations hold traditional knowledge about land management in their bioregions.

International attention has turned to intellectual property laws to preserve, protect, and promote traditional knowledge. In 1992, the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) recognized the value of traditional knowledge in protecting species, ecosystems and landscapes, and incorporated language regulating access to it and its use (discussed below). It was soon urged that implementing these provisions would require revision[how?] of international intellectual property agreements.[citation needed]

This became even more pressing with the adoption of the World Trade Organization Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs), which established rules for creating and protecting intellectual property that could be interpreted to conflict with the agreements made under the CBD.[18] In response, the states who had ratified the CBD requested the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) to investigate the relationship between intellectual property rights, biodiversity and traditional knowledge. WIPO began this work with a fact-finding mission in 1999. Considering the issues involved with biodiversity and the broader issues in TRIPs (involving all forms of cultural expressions, not just those associated with biodiversity – including traditional designs, music, songs, stories, etc.), WIPO established the Intergovernmental Committee on Intellectual Property and Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and Folklore (IGC-GRTKF). WIPO Lex provides support for collections of laws concerning Traditional Knowledge.[19]

The period of the early 1990s to the Millennium was also characterized by the rapid rise in global civil society. The high-level Brundtland Report (1987) recommended a change in development policy that allowed for direct community participation and respected local rights and aspirations. Indigenous peoples and others had successfully petitioned the United Nations to establish a Working Group on Indigenous Populations that made two early surveys on treaty rights and land rights. These led to a greater public and governmental recognition of indigenous land and resource rights, and the need to address the issue of collective human rights, as distinct from the individual rights of existing human rights law.

The collective human rights of indigenous and local communities has been increasingly recognized – such as in the International Labour Organization (ILO) Convention 169 (1989) and the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (2007). The Rio Declaration (1992), endorsed by the presidents and ministers of the majority of the countries of the world, recognized indigenous and local communities as distinct groups with special concerns that should be addressed by states.

Initial concern was over the territorial rights and traditional resource rights of these communities. Indigenous peoples soon showed concern for the misappropriation and misuse of their "intangible" knowledge and cultural heritage. Indigenous peoples and local communities have resisted, among other things: the use of traditional symbols and designs as mascots, derivative arts and crafts; the use or modification of traditional songs; the patenting of traditional uses of medicinal plants; and the copyrighting and distribution of traditional stories.

Indigenous peoples and local communities have sought to prevent the patenting of traditional knowledge and resources where they have not given express consent. They have sought for greater protection and control over traditional knowledge and resources. Certain communities have also sought to ensure that their traditional knowledge is used equitably - according to restrictions set by their traditions, or requiring benefit sharing for its use according to benefits which they define.

Three broad approaches to protect traditional knowledge have been developed. The first emphasizes protecting traditional knowledge as a form of cultural heritage. The second looks at protection of traditional knowledge as a collective human right. The third, taken by the WTO and WIPO, investigates the use of existing or novel sui generis measures to protect traditional knowledge.

Currently, only a few nations offer explicit sui generis protection for traditional knowledge. However, a number of countries are still undecided as to whether law should give traditional knowledge deference. Indigenous peoples have shown ambivalence about the intellectual property approach. Some have been willing to investigate how existing intellectual property mechanisms (primarily: patents, copyrights, trademarks and trade secrets) can protect traditional knowledge. Others believe that an intellectual property approach may work, but will require more radical and novel forms of intellectual property law ("sui generis rights"). Others believe that the intellectual property system uses concepts and terms that are incompatible with traditional cultural concepts, and favors the commercialization of their traditions, which they generally resist. Many have argued that the form of protection should refer to collective human rights to protect their distinct identities, religions and cultural heritage.

Public domain edit

Literary and artistic works based upon, derived from or inspired by traditional culture or folklore may incorporate new elements or expressions. Hence these works may be "new" works with a living and identifiable creator, or creators. Such contemporary works may include a new interpretation, arrangement, adaptation or collection of pre-existing cultural heritage that is in the public domain. Traditional culture or folklore may also be "repackaged" in digital formats, or restoration and colorization. Contemporary and tradition based expressions and works of traditional culture are generally protected under existing copyright law, a form of intellectual property law, as they are sufficiently original to be regarded as "new" upon publication. Copyright protection is normally temporary. When a work has existed for a long enough period (often for the rest of the author's life plus an additional 50 to 70 years), the legal ability of the creator to prevent other people from reprinting, modifying, or using the property lapses, and the work is said to enter the public domain.[20] Copyright protection also does not extend to folk songs and other works that developed over time, with no identifiable creators.

Having an idea, story, or other work legally protected only for a limited period of time is not accepted by some indigenous peoples. On this point the Tulalip Tribes of Washington state has commented that "open sharing does not automatically confer a right to use the knowledge (of indigenous people)... traditional cultural expressions are not in the public domain because indigenous peoples have failed to take the steps necessary to protect the knowledge in the Western intellectual property system, but from a failure of governments and citizens to recognise and respect the customary laws regulating their use".[20] Equally, however, the idea of restricting the use of publicly available information without clear notice and justification is regarded by many in developed nations as unethical as well as impractical.[21]

Indigenous intellectual property edit

 
Buddhist monk Geshe Konchog Wangdu reads Mahayana sutras from an old woodblock copy of the Tibetan Kanjur.

Indigenous intellectual property[2] is an umbrella legal term used in national and international forums to identify indigenous peoples' special rights to claim (from within their own laws) all that their indigenous groups know now, have known, or will know.[22] It is a concept that has developed out of a predominantly western legal tradition, and has most recently been promoted by the World Intellectual Property Organization, as part of a more general United Nations push[23] to see the diverse wealth of the world's indigenous, intangible cultural heritage better valued and better protected against probable, ongoing misappropriation and misuse.[24]

In the lead-up to and during the United Nations International Year for the World's Indigenous People (1993),[25] and then during the following UN Decade of the World's Indigenous People (1995–2004),[23] a number of conferences of both indigenous and non-indigenous specialists were held in different parts of the world, resulting in a number of declarations and statements identifying, explaining, refining, and defining "indigenous intellectual property".[26]

Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) edit

 
Cree men, including Big Bear (Mistahi-maskwa) trading with colonists at Fort Pitt, Saskatchewan, 1884

Article 27. 3(b) of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) sets out certain conditions under which certain biological materials or intellectual innovations may be excluded from patenting. The Article also contains a requirement that Article 27 be reviewed. In the TRIPs-related Doha Declaration of 2001, Paragraph 19 expanded the review to a review of Article 27 and the rest of the TRIPs agreement to include the relationship between the TRIPS Agreement and the 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the protection of traditional knowledge and folklore.[18]

The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) edit

 
Traditional wild rice harvesting continues into the present day as a living tradition.

The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), signed at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) in 1993, was the first international environmental convention to develop measures for the use and protection of traditional knowledge, related to the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.[27] By 2006, 188 had ratified the Convention and agreed to be bound by its provisions, the largest number of nations to accede to any existing treaty (the United States is one of the few countries that has signed, but not ratified, the CBD). Significant provisions include:

Article 8. In-situ Conservation

Each Contracting Party shall, as far as possible and as appropriate:

(a)...

(j) Subject to its national legislation, respect, preserve and maintain knowledge, innovations and practices of indigenous and local communities embodying traditional lifestyles relevant for the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity and promote their wider application with the approval and involvement of the holders of such knowledge, innovations and practices and encourage the equitable sharing of the benefits arising from the utilization of such knowledge, innovations and practices...

Article 10. Sustainable Use of Components of Biological Diversity

Each Contracting Party shall, as far as possible and as appropriate:

(a)...

(c) Protect and encourage customary use of biological resources in accordance with traditional cultural practices that are compatible with conservation or sustainable use requirements

The interpretation of these provisions has been elaborated through decisions by the parties (ratifiers of the Convention) (see the Convention on Biological Diversity Handbook, available free in digital format from the Secretariat). Nevertheless, the provisions regarding Access and Benefit Sharing contained in the Convention on Biological Diversity never achieved consensus and soon the authority over these questions fell back to WIPO.[28]

At the Convention on Biological Diversity meeting, in Buenos Aires, in 1996, emphasis was put on local knowledge. Key players, such as local communities and indigenous peoples, should be recognized by States, and have their sovereignty recognised over the biodiversity of their territories, so that they can continue protecting it.[29]

The parties to the Convention set a 2010 target to negotiate an international legally binding regime on access and benefit sharing (ABS) at the Eighth meeting (COP8), 20–31 March 2006 in Curitiba, Brazil. This target was met in October 2010 in Nagoya, Japan, by conclusion of the Nagoya Protocol to the CBD. The agreement is now open for ratification, and will come into force when 50 signatories have ratified it. It entered into force on 12 October 2014. As of August 2020, 128 nations ratified the Nagoya Protocol.[30] The Protocol treats of inter-governmental obligations related to genetic resources, and includes measures related to the rights of indigenous and local communities to control access to and derive benefits from the use of genetic resources and associated traditional knowledge.

Protection of TK by country edit

Australia edit

In September 2020, the government of Queensland introduced the Biodiscovery and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2020, which introduced protections for accessing and using First Nations peoples' traditional knowledge in biodiscovery.[31]

India edit

In 2001, the Government of India set up the Traditional Knowledge Digital Library (TKDL) as repository of 1200 formulations of various systems of Indian medicine, such as Ayurveda, Unani and Siddha and 1500 Yoga postures (asanas), translated into five languages – English, German, French, Spanish and Japanese.[citation needed] India has also signed agreements with the European Patent Office (EPO), United Kingdom Intellectual Property Office (UKIPO) and the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) to prevent the grant of invalid patents by giving patent examiners at International Patent Offices access to the TKDL database for patent search and examination.[citation needed]

Some of the legislative measures to protect TK are The Biological Diversity Act (2002), The Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers' Rights Act (2001) and The Geographical Indication of Goods (Registration And Protection) Act, 1999.

The Intellectual Property Rights Policy for Kerala released in 2008[32] proposes adoption of the concepts 'knowledge commons' and 'commons licence' for the protection of traditional knowledge. The policy, largely created by Prabhat Patnaik and R.S. Praveen Raj, seeks to put all traditional knowledge into the realm of "knowledge commons", distinguishing this from the public domain. Raj has argued that TKDL cannot at the same time be kept confidential and treated as prior art.[33][34]

In 2016, Shashi Tharoor, Member of Parliament from Thiruvananthapuram introduced a Private Bill (the Protection of Traditional Knowledge Bill, 2016[35]) codifying the "protection, preservation and promotion" of traditional knowledge system in India. However the bill was criticised for failing to address the real concern of traditional knowledge.[36][further explanation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Loovers, Jan Peter Laurens (2021). Reading Life with Gwich'in: An Educational Approach. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1032082462.
  2. ^ a b "Cultural heritage and new media: A future for the past". Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  3. ^ a b c Terri Janke and Company; Janke, Terri; Sentina, Maiko (2018). Indigenous Knowledge: Issues for Protection and Management: Discussion paper (PDF). Commissioned by IP Australia & the Department of Industry, Innovation and Science. Commonwealth of Australia.
  4. ^ Kala, C.P. (2012) Traditional ecological knowledge and conservation of ethnobotanical species in the buffer zone of Pachmarhi Biosphere Reserve, Madhya Pradesh. Indian Institute of Forest Management, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh. 194 pp
  5. ^ Turner, N. J., Ignace, M. B., & Ignace, R. (2000). Traditional ecological knowledge and wisdom of aboriginal peoples in British Columbia. Ecological applications, 10(5), 1275-1287
  6. ^ Kala, C.P. (2004). Studies on the indigenous knowledge, practices and traditional uses of forest products by human societies in Uttaranchal state of India. G.B. Pant Institute of Himalayan Environment and Development, Almora, India. 82 pp.
  7. ^ International Council for Science / Conseil International pour la Science (March 2002). "Science and Traditional Knowledge: Report from the ICSU Study Group on Science and Traditional Knowledge" (PDF). p. 3.
  8. ^ Adom, Dickson (18 June 2018). "Traditional Biodiversity Conservation Strategy As A Complement to the Existing Scientific Biodiversity Conservation Models in Ghana". Environment and Natural Resources Research. 8 (3): 1. doi:10.5539/enrr.v8n3p1. ISSN 1927-0496.
  9. ^ Peña, Devon G.,Mexican Americans and the Environment, The University of Arizona Press, 2005, p. 198.
  10. ^ Posey, Darrel Addison. "Indigenous Management of Tropical Forest Ecosystems: The case of the Kayapo Indians of the Brazilian Amazon" in Dove and Carpenter, Environmental Anthropology: a historical reader, Blackwell Publishing, Oxford, 2008, p. 90.
  11. ^ Wasongo, V.O., Kambewa, D., and Bekalo, I. (2011). Community-Based Natural Resource Management (p. 194). In W.O. Ochola, P.C. Sanginga, I. Bekalo (Eds.), Managing Natural Resources for Development in Africa. A Resource Book. Nairobi, Kenya: Univ. of Nairobi Press, 2011 (Chapter 4: pp. 165-210).
  12. ^ Sharma, Rajender Kumar (2021). "Physical seed dormancy in Abrus precatorious (Ratti): a scientific validation of indigenous technique". Experimental Results. 2. doi:10.1017/exp.2020.64. ISSN 2516-712X.
  13. ^ Chamberlin, J.E. (2003). If This Is Your Land, Where Are Your Stories? Finding Common Ground. Toronto: Alfred A. Knopf Canada.
  14. ^ Janke and Company, Terri. Indigenous Knowledge:Issues for protection and management (PDF). Commissioned by IP Australia & the Department of Industry, Innovation and Science.
  15. ^ Zuckermann, Ghil'ad; et al. (2015), (PDF), Australian Government: Indigenous Culture Support, p. 7, archived from the original (PDF) on 30 March 2016
  16. ^ "Intergovernmental Committee (IGC)". www.wipo.int. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  17. ^ "Presentations on Indigenous and Local Community Experiences". www.wipo.int. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  18. ^ a b "WTO | intellectual property (TRIPS) - agreement text - contents". www.wto.org. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  19. ^ "WIPO Lex". wipolex.wipo.int. Retrieved 6 July 2022.
  20. ^ a b Farah, Paolo Davide; Tremolada, Riccardo (15 June 2014). "Diritti di Proprietà Intellettuale, Diritti Umani e Patrimonio Culturale Immateriale (Intellectual Property Rights, Human Rights and Intangible Cultural Heritage)". Rochester, NY. SSRN 2472388. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  21. ^ (PDF). International Chamber of Commerce. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 May 2012. Retrieved 5 December 2013.
  22. ^ Rainforest Aboriginal Network (1993) Julayinbul: Aboriginal Intellectual and Cultural Property Definitions, Ownership and Strategies for Protection. Rainforest Aboriginal Network. Cairns. Page 65
  23. ^ a b Office of the united nations high commissioner for human rights (2007). . Office of the United Nations High Commissioner of Human Rights. Geneva. Archived from the original on 7 November 2007. Retrieved 29 November 2007.
  24. ^ DODSON, Page 12.
  25. ^ Watson, Irene (1992). "1993: International Year for Indigenous Peoples". Aboriginal Law Bulletin. AustLII. Retrieved 29 November 2007.[permanent dead link]
  26. ^ "Indigenous People and Traditional Knowledge: Resources". Dead link. Indigenouspeoplesissues.com. Retrieved 5 December 2013.
  27. ^ "The Convention on Biological Diversity". The Convention on Biological Diversity. 17 March 2020.
  28. ^ Louafi, Sélim; Morin, Jean-Frédéric (February 2004). "International governance of biodiversity: Involving all the users of genetic resources". Les synthèses de l'Iddri (5).
  29. ^ Roussel, Bernard. "The CBD: Local knowledge systems at the heart of international debates," Les Synthèses, n° 2, February 2003, Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations.
  30. ^ "Parties to the Nagoya Protocol". Convention on Biological Diversity. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  31. ^ [1], Business Queensland, Retrieved October 6, 2020.
  32. ^ . The Hindu. Chennai, India. 28 June 2008. Archived from the original on 2 July 2008.
  33. ^ "No Need Of IPRs For Protecting Traditional Knowledge". Intellectual Property Watch. 3 September 2015. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  34. ^ "Caution on classifying-Traditional Knowledge under IPR". The Hindu. 28 August 2015.
  35. ^ Protection of Traditional Knowledge Bill, 2016
  36. ^ Knowledge Bill failure

External links edit

  • WTO: TRIPs Article 27.3b, traditional knowledge, biodiversity
  • Statement by the Tulalip Tribes of Washington on Folklore, Indigenous Knowledge, and the Public Domain, July 09, 2003
  • Anti-colonial discourse and indigenous knowledges
  • Traditional ecological knowledge handbook : a training manual and reference guide for designing, conducting, and participating in research projects using traditional ecological knowledge / prepared by Rita A. Miraglia. Hosted by Alaska State Publications Program.
  • Research article by Terra Nuova on "Preservation and maintenance of biological diversity related knowledge of indigenous diversity and local communities with traditional lifestyles Bony Forest, Ijara District"

traditional, knowledge, indigenous, knowledge, folk, knowledge, local, knowledge, generally, refer, knowledge, systems, embedded, cultural, traditions, regional, indigenous, local, communities, according, world, intellectual, property, organization, wipo, unit. Traditional knowledge TK indigenous knowledge IK 1 folk knowledge and local knowledge generally refer to knowledge systems embedded in the cultural traditions of regional indigenous or local communities 2 According to the World Intellectual Property Organization WIPO and the United Nations UN traditional knowledge and traditional cultural expressions TCE are both types of indigenous knowledge 3 Traditional knowledge includes types of knowledge about traditional technologies of subsistence e g tools and techniques for hunting or agriculture midwifery ethnobotany and ecological knowledge traditional medicine celestial navigation craft skills ethnoastronomy climate and others These kinds of knowledge crucial for subsistence and survival are generally based on accumulations of empirical observation and on interaction with the environment In many cases traditional knowledge has been passed for generations from person to person as an oral tradition Some forms of traditional knowledge find expression in culture stories legends folklore rituals songs and laws 4 5 6 languages songlines dance games mythology designs visual art and architecture falling under the category of traditional cultural expressions 3 Contents 1 Characteristics and related concepts 1 1 Terminology 2 Property rights 2 1 Public domain 3 Indigenous intellectual property 3 1 Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights TRIPs 3 2 The Convention on Biological Diversity CBD 4 Protection of TK by country 4 1 Australia 4 2 India 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksCharacteristics and related concepts edit nbsp Tribal Colleges preserve and pass on both general knowledge and through employing community Elders traditional Indigenous knowledge Leech Lake Tribal College Minnesota A report of the International Council for Science ICSU Study Group on Science and Traditional Knowledge characterises traditional knowledge as 7 a cumulative body of knowledge know how practices and representations maintained and developed by peoples with extended histories of interaction with the natural environment These sophisticated sets of understandings interpretations and meanings are part and parcel of a cultural complex that encompasses language naming and classification systems resource use practices ritual spirituality and worldview Traditional knowledge typically distinguishes one community from another In some communities traditional knowledge takes on personal and spiritual meanings Traditional knowledge can also reflect a community s interests Some communities depend on their traditional knowledge for survival Traditional knowledge regarding the environment such as taboos proverbs and cosmological knowledge systems may provide a conservation ethos for biodiversity preservation 8 This is particularly true of traditional environmental knowledge which refers to a particular form of place based knowledge of the diversity and interactions among plant and animal species landforms watercourses and other qualities of the biophysical environment in a given place 9 As an example of a society with a wealth of traditional ecological knowledge TEK the South American Kayapo people have developed an extensive classification system of ecological zones of the Amazonian tropical savannah i e campo cerrado to better manage the land 10 Some social scientists conceptualise knowledge within a naturalistic framework and emphasize the gradation of recent knowledge into knowledge acquired over many generations These accounts use terms like adaptively acquired knowledge socially constructed knowledge and other terms that emphasize the social aspects of knowledge 11 Local knowledge and traditional knowledge may be thought of as distinguished by the length of time they have existed from decades to centuries or millennia Indigenous knowledge or techniques ITKs are the treasure troves of ancient wisdom and are developed through trial and error experiences gained over the centuries and are time tested but generally not substantiated by any scientific evidences However most of the ITKs were known to be scientifically effective and valid 12 Scholarly studies in the naturalistic tradition clarification needed demonstrate that traditional knowledge is not a natural category and may reflect power struggles and relationships for land resources and social control rather than adherence to a claimed ancestry or heritage citation needed On the other hand indigenous and local communities themselves may perceive traditional knowledge very differently The knowledge of indigenous and local communities is often embedded in a cosmology and any distinction between intangible knowledge and physical things can become blurred Indigenous peoples often say that indigenous knowledge is holistic and cannot be meaningfully separated from the lands and resources available to them Traditional knowledge in such cosmologies is inextricably bound to ancestors and ancestral lands citation needed Knowledge may not be acquired by naturalistic trial and error but through direct revelation through conversations with the creator spirits or ancestors Chamberlin 2003 writes of a Gitksan elder from British Columbia confronted by a government land claim If this is your land he asked where are your stories 13 Indigenous and local communities often do not have strong traditions of ownership over knowledge that resemble the modern forms of private ownership Many have clear traditions of custodianship over knowledge and customary law may guide who may use different kinds of knowledge at particular times and places and specify obligations that accompany the use of knowledge For example a hunter might be permitted to kill an animal only to feed the community and not to feed himself From an indigenous perspective misappropriation and misuse of knowledge may be offensive to traditions and may have spiritual and physical repercussions in indigenous cosmological systems Consequently indigenous and local communities argue that others use of their traditional knowledge warrants respect and sensitivity Critics of traditional knowledge however see such demands for respect as an attempt to prevent unsubstantiated beliefs from being subjected to the same scrutiny as other knowledge claims citation needed This has particular significance for environmental management because the spiritual component of traditional knowledge can justify any activity including the unsustainable harvesting of resources Terminology edit nbsp The art of Dine weaving is part of the traditional knowledge of the Navajo people Traditional Knowledge TK and Traditional Cultural Expressions TCE are both types of Indigenous Knowledge IK according to the definitions and terminology used in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples UNDRIP and by the World Intellectual Property Organization WIPO 14 The phrase traditional cultural expressions is used by WIPO to refer to any form of artistic and literary expression in which traditional culture and knowledge are embodied They are transmitted from one generation to the next and include handmade textiles paintings stories legends ceremonies music songs rhythms and dance 15 WIPO negotiates international legal protection of traditional cultural expressions through the Intergovernmental Committee on Intellectual Property and Genetic Resources Traditional Knowledge and Folklore IGC 16 During the committee s sessions representatives of indigenous and local communities host panels relating to the preservation of traditional knowledge 17 Leading international authority on Indigenous cultural and intellectual property Australian lawyer Terri Janke says that within Australian Indigenous communities comprising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples the use of the word traditional tends not to be preferred as it implies that Indigenous culture is locked in time 3 Property rights edit nbsp Indigenous lands are endangered by climate change Many Indigenous Nations hold traditional knowledge about land management in their bioregions International attention has turned to intellectual property laws to preserve protect and promote traditional knowledge In 1992 the Convention on Biological Diversity CBD recognized the value of traditional knowledge in protecting species ecosystems and landscapes and incorporated language regulating access to it and its use discussed below It was soon urged that implementing these provisions would require revision how of international intellectual property agreements citation needed This became even more pressing with the adoption of the World Trade Organization Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights TRIPs which established rules for creating and protecting intellectual property that could be interpreted to conflict with the agreements made under the CBD 18 In response the states who had ratified the CBD requested the World Intellectual Property Organization WIPO to investigate the relationship between intellectual property rights biodiversity and traditional knowledge WIPO began this work with a fact finding mission in 1999 Considering the issues involved with biodiversity and the broader issues in TRIPs involving all forms of cultural expressions not just those associated with biodiversity including traditional designs music songs stories etc WIPO established the Intergovernmental Committee on Intellectual Property and Genetic Resources Traditional Knowledge and Folklore IGC GRTKF WIPO Lex provides support for collections of laws concerning Traditional Knowledge 19 The period of the early 1990s to the Millennium was also characterized by the rapid rise in global civil society The high level Brundtland Report 1987 recommended a change in development policy that allowed for direct community participation and respected local rights and aspirations Indigenous peoples and others had successfully petitioned the United Nations to establish a Working Group on Indigenous Populations that made two early surveys on treaty rights and land rights These led to a greater public and governmental recognition of indigenous land and resource rights and the need to address the issue of collective human rights as distinct from the individual rights of existing human rights law The collective human rights of indigenous and local communities has been increasingly recognized such as in the International Labour Organization ILO Convention 169 1989 and the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples 2007 The Rio Declaration 1992 endorsed by the presidents and ministers of the majority of the countries of the world recognized indigenous and local communities as distinct groups with special concerns that should be addressed by states Initial concern was over the territorial rights and traditional resource rights of these communities Indigenous peoples soon showed concern for the misappropriation and misuse of their intangible knowledge and cultural heritage Indigenous peoples and local communities have resisted among other things the use of traditional symbols and designs as mascots derivative arts and crafts the use or modification of traditional songs the patenting of traditional uses of medicinal plants and the copyrighting and distribution of traditional stories Indigenous peoples and local communities have sought to prevent the patenting of traditional knowledge and resources where they have not given express consent They have sought for greater protection and control over traditional knowledge and resources Certain communities have also sought to ensure that their traditional knowledge is used equitably according to restrictions set by their traditions or requiring benefit sharing for its use according to benefits which they define Three broad approaches to protect traditional knowledge have been developed The first emphasizes protecting traditional knowledge as a form of cultural heritage The second looks at protection of traditional knowledge as a collective human right The third taken by the WTO and WIPO investigates the use of existing or novel sui generis measures to protect traditional knowledge Currently only a few nations offer explicit sui generis protection for traditional knowledge However a number of countries are still undecided as to whether law should give traditional knowledge deference Indigenous peoples have shown ambivalence about the intellectual property approach Some have been willing to investigate how existing intellectual property mechanisms primarily patents copyrights trademarks and trade secrets can protect traditional knowledge Others believe that an intellectual property approach may work but will require more radical and novel forms of intellectual property law sui generis rights Others believe that the intellectual property system uses concepts and terms that are incompatible with traditional cultural concepts and favors the commercialization of their traditions which they generally resist Many have argued that the form of protection should refer to collective human rights to protect their distinct identities religions and cultural heritage Public domain edit Literary and artistic works based upon derived from or inspired by traditional culture or folklore may incorporate new elements or expressions Hence these works may be new works with a living and identifiable creator or creators Such contemporary works may include a new interpretation arrangement adaptation or collection of pre existing cultural heritage that is in the public domain Traditional culture or folklore may also be repackaged in digital formats or restoration and colorization Contemporary and tradition based expressions and works of traditional culture are generally protected under existing copyright law a form of intellectual property law as they are sufficiently original to be regarded as new upon publication Copyright protection is normally temporary When a work has existed for a long enough period often for the rest of the author s life plus an additional 50 to 70 years the legal ability of the creator to prevent other people from reprinting modifying or using the property lapses and the work is said to enter the public domain 20 Copyright protection also does not extend to folk songs and other works that developed over time with no identifiable creators Having an idea story or other work legally protected only for a limited period of time is not accepted by some indigenous peoples On this point the Tulalip Tribes of Washington state has commented that open sharing does not automatically confer a right to use the knowledge of indigenous people traditional cultural expressions are not in the public domain because indigenous peoples have failed to take the steps necessary to protect the knowledge in the Western intellectual property system but from a failure of governments and citizens to recognise and respect the customary laws regulating their use 20 Equally however the idea of restricting the use of publicly available information without clear notice and justification is regarded by many in developed nations as unethical as well as impractical 21 Indigenous intellectual property edit nbsp Buddhist monk Geshe Konchog Wangdu reads Mahayana sutras from an old woodblock copy of the Tibetan Kanjur Main article Indigenous intellectual property Indigenous intellectual property 2 is an umbrella legal term used in national and international forums to identify indigenous peoples special rights to claim from within their own laws all that their indigenous groups know now have known or will know 22 It is a concept that has developed out of a predominantly western legal tradition and has most recently been promoted by the World Intellectual Property Organization as part of a more general United Nations push 23 to see the diverse wealth of the world s indigenous intangible cultural heritage better valued and better protected against probable ongoing misappropriation and misuse 24 In the lead up to and during the United Nations International Year for the World s Indigenous People 1993 25 and then during the following UN Decade of the World s Indigenous People 1995 2004 23 a number of conferences of both indigenous and non indigenous specialists were held in different parts of the world resulting in a number of declarations and statements identifying explaining refining and defining indigenous intellectual property 26 Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights TRIPs edit nbsp Cree men including Big Bear Mistahi maskwa trading with colonists at Fort Pitt Saskatchewan 1884Article 27 3 b of the Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights TRIPs sets out certain conditions under which certain biological materials or intellectual innovations may be excluded from patenting The Article also contains a requirement that Article 27 be reviewed In the TRIPs related Doha Declaration of 2001 Paragraph 19 expanded the review to a review of Article 27 and the rest of the TRIPs agreement to include the relationship between the TRIPS Agreement and the 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity CBD and the protection of traditional knowledge and folklore 18 The Convention on Biological Diversity CBD edit nbsp Traditional wild rice harvesting continues into the present day as a living tradition The Convention on Biological Diversity CBD signed at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development UNCED in 1993 was the first international environmental convention to develop measures for the use and protection of traditional knowledge related to the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity 27 By 2006 188 had ratified the Convention and agreed to be bound by its provisions the largest number of nations to accede to any existing treaty the United States is one of the few countries that has signed but not ratified the CBD Significant provisions include Article 8 In situ ConservationEach Contracting Party shall as far as possible and as appropriate a j Subject to its national legislation respect preserve and maintain knowledge innovations and practices of indigenous and local communities embodying traditional lifestyles relevant for the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity and promote their wider application with the approval and involvement of the holders of such knowledge innovations and practices and encourage the equitable sharing of the benefits arising from the utilization of such knowledge innovations and practices Article 10 Sustainable Use of Components of Biological DiversityEach Contracting Party shall as far as possible and as appropriate a c Protect and encourage customary use of biological resources in accordance with traditional cultural practices that are compatible with conservation or sustainable use requirements The interpretation of these provisions has been elaborated through decisions by the parties ratifiers of the Convention see the Convention on Biological Diversity Handbook available free in digital format from the Secretariat Nevertheless the provisions regarding Access and Benefit Sharing contained in the Convention on Biological Diversity never achieved consensus and soon the authority over these questions fell back to WIPO 28 At the Convention on Biological Diversity meeting in Buenos Aires in 1996 emphasis was put on local knowledge Key players such as local communities and indigenous peoples should be recognized by States and have their sovereignty recognised over the biodiversity of their territories so that they can continue protecting it 29 The parties to the Convention set a 2010 target to negotiate an international legally binding regime on access and benefit sharing ABS at the Eighth meeting COP8 20 31 March 2006 in Curitiba Brazil This target was met in October 2010 in Nagoya Japan by conclusion of the Nagoya Protocol to the CBD The agreement is now open for ratification and will come into force when 50 signatories have ratified it It entered into force on 12 October 2014 As of August 2020 update 128 nations ratified the Nagoya Protocol 30 The Protocol treats of inter governmental obligations related to genetic resources and includes measures related to the rights of indigenous and local communities to control access to and derive benefits from the use of genetic resources and associated traditional knowledge Protection of TK by country editAustralia edit In September 2020 the government of Queensland introduced the Biodiscovery and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2020 which introduced protections for accessing and using First Nations peoples traditional knowledge in biodiscovery 31 India edit See also Indian Knowledge Systems In 2001 the Government of India set up the Traditional Knowledge Digital Library TKDL as repository of 1200 formulations of various systems of Indian medicine such as Ayurveda Unani and Siddha and 1500 Yoga postures asanas translated into five languages English German French Spanish and Japanese citation needed India has also signed agreements with the European Patent Office EPO United Kingdom Intellectual Property Office UKIPO and the United States Patent and Trademark Office USPTO to prevent the grant of invalid patents by giving patent examiners at International Patent Offices access to the TKDL database for patent search and examination citation needed Some of the legislative measures to protect TK are The Biological Diversity Act 2002 The Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers Rights Act 2001 and The Geographical Indication of Goods Registration And Protection Act 1999 The Intellectual Property Rights Policy for Kerala released in 2008 32 proposes adoption of the concepts knowledge commons and commons licence for the protection of traditional knowledge The policy largely created by Prabhat Patnaik and R S Praveen Raj seeks to put all traditional knowledge into the realm of knowledge commons distinguishing this from the public domain Raj has argued that TKDL cannot at the same time be kept confidential and treated as prior art 33 34 In 2016 Shashi Tharoor Member of Parliament from Thiruvananthapuram introduced a Private Bill the Protection of Traditional Knowledge Bill 2016 35 codifying the protection preservation and promotion of traditional knowledge system in India However the bill was criticised for failing to address the real concern of traditional knowledge 36 further explanation needed See also editAgroecology Biopiracy Environmental racism Ethnoastronomy Ethnobiology Ethnobotany Ethnoecology Ethnomathematics Ethnomedicine Ethnoscience Ethnozoology Folklore Non timber forest product Indigenous intellectual property Indigenous peoples Intangible cultural heritage Intellectual property Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit traditional knowledge in Arctic Canada Sui generis protection Traditional medicine Traditional knowledge GIS Traditional ecological knowledge Yoga piracyReferences edit Loovers Jan Peter Laurens 2021 Reading Life with Gwich in An Educational Approach London Routledge ISBN 978 1032082462 a b Cultural heritage and new media A future for the past Retrieved 5 December 2019 a b c Terri Janke and Company Janke Terri Sentina Maiko 2018 Indigenous Knowledge Issues for Protection and Management Discussion paper PDF Commissioned by IP Australia amp the Department of Industry Innovation and Science Commonwealth of Australia Kala C P 2012 Traditional ecological knowledge and conservation of ethnobotanical species in the buffer zone of Pachmarhi Biosphere Reserve Madhya Pradesh Indian Institute of Forest Management Bhopal Madhya Pradesh 194 pp Turner N J Ignace M B amp Ignace R 2000 Traditional ecological knowledge and wisdom of aboriginal peoples in British Columbia Ecological applications 10 5 1275 1287 Kala C P 2004 Studies on the indigenous knowledge practices and traditional uses of forest products by human societies in Uttaranchal state of India G B Pant Institute of Himalayan Environment and Development Almora India 82 pp International Council for Science Conseil International pour la Science March 2002 Science and Traditional Knowledge Report from the ICSU Study Group on Science and Traditional Knowledge PDF p 3 Adom Dickson 18 June 2018 Traditional Biodiversity Conservation Strategy As A Complement to the Existing Scientific Biodiversity Conservation Models in Ghana Environment and Natural Resources Research 8 3 1 doi 10 5539 enrr v8n3p1 ISSN 1927 0496 Pena Devon G Mexican Americans and the Environment The University of Arizona Press 2005 p 198 Posey Darrel Addison Indigenous Management of Tropical Forest Ecosystems The case of the Kayapo Indians of the Brazilian Amazon in Dove and Carpenter Environmental Anthropology a historical reader Blackwell Publishing Oxford 2008 p 90 Wasongo V O Kambewa D and Bekalo I 2011 Community Based Natural Resource Management p 194 In W O Ochola P C Sanginga I Bekalo Eds Managing Natural Resources for Development in Africa A Resource Book Nairobi Kenya Univ of Nairobi Press 2011 Chapter 4 pp 165 210 Sharma Rajender Kumar 2021 Physical seed dormancy in Abrus precatorious Ratti a scientific validation of indigenous technique Experimental Results 2 doi 10 1017 exp 2020 64 ISSN 2516 712X Chamberlin J E 2003 If This Is Your Land Where Are Your Stories Finding Common Ground Toronto Alfred A Knopf Canada Janke and Company Terri Indigenous Knowledge Issues for protection and management PDF Commissioned by IP Australia amp the Department of Industry Innovation and Science Zuckermann Ghil ad et al 2015 ENGAGING A Guide to Interacting Respectfully and Reciprocally with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People and their Arts Practices and Intellectual Property PDF Australian Government Indigenous Culture Support p 7 archived from the original PDF on 30 March 2016 Intergovernmental Committee IGC www wipo int Retrieved 14 September 2022 Presentations on Indigenous and Local Community Experiences www wipo int Retrieved 14 September 2022 a b WTO intellectual property TRIPS agreement text contents www wto org Retrieved 14 September 2022 WIPO Lex wipolex wipo int Retrieved 6 July 2022 a b Farah Paolo Davide Tremolada Riccardo 15 June 2014 Diritti di Proprieta Intellettuale Diritti Umani e Patrimonio Culturale Immateriale Intellectual Property Rights Human Rights and Intangible Cultural Heritage Rochester NY SSRN 2472388 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Policy commissions PDF International Chamber of Commerce Archived from the original PDF on 11 May 2012 Retrieved 5 December 2013 Rainforest Aboriginal Network 1993 Julayinbul Aboriginal Intellectual and Cultural Property Definitions Ownership and Strategies for Protection Rainforest Aboriginal Network Cairns Page 65 a b Office of the united nations high commissioner for human rights 2007 Indigenous peoples Office of the United Nations High Commissioner of Human Rights Geneva Archived from the original on 7 November 2007 Retrieved 29 November 2007 DODSON Page 12 Watson Irene 1992 1993 International Year for Indigenous Peoples Aboriginal Law Bulletin AustLII Retrieved 29 November 2007 permanent dead link Indigenous People and Traditional Knowledge Resources Dead link Indigenouspeoplesissues com Retrieved 5 December 2013 The Convention on Biological Diversity The Convention on Biological Diversity 17 March 2020 Louafi Selim Morin Jean Frederic February 2004 International governance of biodiversity Involving all the users of genetic resources Les syntheses de l Iddri 5 Roussel Bernard The CBD Local knowledge systems at the heart of international debates Les Syntheses n 2 February 2003 Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations Parties to the Nagoya Protocol Convention on Biological Diversity Retrieved 19 October 2017 1 Business Queensland Retrieved October 6 2020 IPRs policy proposes knowledge commons The Hindu Chennai India 28 June 2008 Archived from the original on 2 July 2008 No Need Of IPRs For Protecting Traditional Knowledge Intellectual Property Watch 3 September 2015 Retrieved 2 August 2018 Caution on classifying Traditional Knowledge under IPR The Hindu 28 August 2015 Protection of Traditional Knowledge Bill 2016 Knowledge Bill failureExternal links editCBD Article 8 j TradItional Knowledge Innovations and Practices WTO TRIPs Article 27 3b traditional knowledge biodiversity International Workshop on Free Prior and InforMed Consent and Indigenous Peoples Statement by the Tulalip Tribes of Washington on Folklore Indigenous Knowledge and the Public Domain July 09 2003 Intellectual Property Rights Open Source Methods and Traditional Knowledge in Developing Countries Anti colonial discourse and indigenous knowledges Traditional ecological knowledge handbook a training manual and reference guide for designing conducting and participating in research projects using traditional ecological knowledge prepared by Rita A Miraglia Hosted by Alaska State Publications Program Research article by Terra Nuova on Preservation and maintenance of biological diversity related knowledge of indigenous diversity and local communities with traditional lifestyles Bony Forest Ijara District Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Traditional knowledge amp oldid 1181786861, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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