Authors
K. Divakaran Prathapan, Rohan Pethiyagoda, [...], Michel Sartori, [...], H.-Z. Zhou
Publication date
2018/6/29
Journal
Science
Volume
360
Issue
6396
Pages
1405-1406
Publisher
AAAS
Description
The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) commits its 196 nation parties to conserve biological diversity, use its components sustainably, and share fairly and equitably the benefits from the utilization of genetic resources. The last of these objectives was further codified in the Convention's Nagoya Protocol (NP), which came into effect in 2014. Although these aspirations are laudable, the NP and resulting national ambitions on Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) of genetic resources have generated several national regulatory regimes fraught with unintended consequences (1). Anticipated benefits from the commercial use of genetic resources, especially those that might flow to local or indigenous communities because of regulated access to those resources, have largely been exaggerated and not yet realized. Instead, national regulations created in anticipation of commercial benefits, particularly in many …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
KD Prathapan, R Pethiyagoda, KS Bawa, PH Raven… - Science, 2018