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Journal ArticleDOI

Rights to the Benefits of Research: Compensating Indigenous Peoples for their Intellectual Contribution

TLDR
The Rights to the Benefits of Research (RBR) as discussed by the authors is proposed as a unifying term to coalesce ideas of compensation for benefits to the Outsiders obtained from a non-commercial research process.
Abstract
Research on indigenous knowledge has resulted in innumerable benefits to the Outsider(s). Indigenous peoples should be compensated in return. This article argues for integrating compensation and empowerment into the heart of the research process itself rather than viewing them as post-project undertakings. "Rights to the Benefits of Research" (RBR) is proposed as a unifying term to coalesce ideas of compensation for benefits to the Outsider(s) obtained from a noncommercial research process. In contrast, compensation of indigenous peoples via "Intellectual Property Rights" (IPR) is seen as predicated primarily upon commercial benefits. A strategy to implement RBR based on ethical guidelines and indigenous peoples' empowerment is suggested. A participatory ethnobotanical research project conducted in Ecuador serves to illustrate benefits for which compensation would fall under RBR but not IPR. The project involved the local communities in documenting their oral knowledge of medicinal plants in a written for...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The value of plants used in traditional medicine for drug discovery.

TL;DR: This review describes and discusses several approaches to selecting higher plants as candidates for drug development with the greatest possibility of success and identifies and discusses advantages and disadvantages of using plants as starting points for drugDevelopment, specifically those used in traditional medicine.
Dissertation

Māori social identities in New Zealand and Hawai'i

TL;DR: This article conducted two narrative interview studies of Maori in two different settings, New Zealand (n=20) and Hawai'i (n =30), to investigate how Maori create meaning in their lives and maintain their social identities across and within those contexts they move through.

Etnoecología: punto de encuentro entre naturaleza y cultura

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the historical development of ethno-ecology, discuss current topics of research in the discipline, and outline the main challenges faced by the discipline so the discipline can contribute to understand and manage current environmental problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Traditional knowledge management and preservation: Intersections with Library and Information Science

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore how traditional knowledge preservation intersects with Library and Information Science (LIS) practices of knowledge classification, organization, and dissemination and establish the various challenges that this intersection poses to these LIS practices.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Indigenous Knowledge of Biological Resources and Intellectual Property Rights: The Role of Anthropology

TL;DR: Rappelant l'origine et la nature des droits de la propriete intellectuelle, les droits moraux et l'efficacite economique, l'A.S. as mentioned in this paper s'interroge sur la connaissance biologique en tant qu'heritage commun, sur la comprehension de the connaissance indigene and ses contributions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anthropological Advocacy: A Contradiction in Terms? [and Comments]

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the rationale for advocating a particular cause can never be anthropological and that anthropology may provide an important background for engaging in advocacy, which in some cases may present itself as a moral imperative.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anthropological Presuppositions of Indigenous Advocacy

TL;DR: For example, the authors argues that any concern with politically sensitive issues can be labelled as "political" due among other reasons, to the fact that our research draws its data from human reality, which is at the same time the very object of activities and decisions of politicians.
Journal ArticleDOI

Informed Consent in Anthropological Research: We Are Not Exempt1

TL;DR: Informed consent is viewed as a process that encourages greater openness and disclosure on the part of researchers, empowers voluntary participants in social research, and engenders a more collaborative relationship between researcher and researched as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sociopolitical, economical and ethical issues in medicinal plant research.

TL;DR: Ethnopharmacology involves a series of sociopolitical, economic and ethical dilemmas, at various levels, and unless these issues are amply discussed and fairy resolved, medicinal plant research runs the risk of serving ethically questionable purposes.
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