Who Owns Tradition? (Part 3)

November 11, 2016 "Who Owns Tradition? Reconceptualizing the Protection of Indigenous and Traditional Knowledge" The Spangenberg Center for Law, Technology & the Arts Conference Case Western Reserve University School of Law The Spangenberg Centre on Law, Technology and the Arts held it...

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Main Author: Case Western Reserve University School of Law
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons 2016
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Online Access:https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/law_videos_general/555
https://youtu.be/s4CRJEITkwk
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spelling ftcasewesternuni:oai:scholarlycommons.law.case.edu:law_videos_general-1472 2023-06-11T04:11:45+02:00 Who Owns Tradition? (Part 3) Case Western Reserve University School of Law 2016-11-11T08:00:00Z https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/law_videos_general/555 https://youtu.be/s4CRJEITkwk unknown Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/law_videos_general/555 https://youtu.be/s4CRJEITkwk Conferences and Symposia traditional knowledge indigenous knowledge genetic resources traditional knowledge--international law indigenous knowledge--international folklore and intellectual property traditional knowledge and intellectual property Cultural Heritage Law Intellectual Property Law International Law text 2016 ftcasewesternuni 2023-04-23T17:51:12Z November 11, 2016 "Who Owns Tradition? Reconceptualizing the Protection of Indigenous and Traditional Knowledge" The Spangenberg Center for Law, Technology & the Arts Conference Case Western Reserve University School of Law The Spangenberg Centre on Law, Technology and the Arts held its annual conference on the issue of Intellectual Property, Traditional Knowledge, and Folklore. Focusing on the international aspects of the issue with a US perspective, the conference seeks to revisit and re-examine the theoretical discomfort, and sometimes outright rejection of the possibility of protection of GR, TK and Folklore in mainstream intellectual property discourse in developed countries. The conference will have a multidisciplinary approach drawing on scholarship in intellectual property, cultural and human rights, history and political science and anthropology. After a hiatus of almost 2 years, the 2015 WIPO General Assembly renewed the mandate of WIPO’s Intergovernmental Committee on Intellectual Property and Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and Folklore (IGC) to resume negotiations on an international instrument for the protection of traditional knowledge. In the interim, national and regional legislation on the protection of genetic resources (GR), Traditional Knowledge (TK) and folklore has proliferated in developing countries, largely modeled on the options in the draft text on protection of TK and protection of folklore developed at WIPO. However, in developed countries like the US, Australia and Canada there nevertheless remain significant stakeholders with an interest in such protection, in particular, Native American tribes, Australian Aboriginal peoples and Canadian First Nations, and yet legislation on protection for GR, TK and Folklore has not been forthcoming. A major reason for this lies in the relatively rigid and calcified nature and history of intellectual property protection in such developed economies, making it much more difficult to graft new sui generis forms of protection onto the ... Text First Nations Case Western Reserve University, School of Law: Scholarly Commons Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Case Western Reserve University, School of Law: Scholarly Commons
op_collection_id ftcasewesternuni
language unknown
topic traditional knowledge
indigenous knowledge
genetic resources
traditional knowledge--international law
indigenous knowledge--international
folklore and intellectual property
traditional knowledge and intellectual property
Cultural Heritage Law
Intellectual Property Law
International Law
spellingShingle traditional knowledge
indigenous knowledge
genetic resources
traditional knowledge--international law
indigenous knowledge--international
folklore and intellectual property
traditional knowledge and intellectual property
Cultural Heritage Law
Intellectual Property Law
International Law
Case Western Reserve University School of Law
Who Owns Tradition? (Part 3)
topic_facet traditional knowledge
indigenous knowledge
genetic resources
traditional knowledge--international law
indigenous knowledge--international
folklore and intellectual property
traditional knowledge and intellectual property
Cultural Heritage Law
Intellectual Property Law
International Law
description November 11, 2016 "Who Owns Tradition? Reconceptualizing the Protection of Indigenous and Traditional Knowledge" The Spangenberg Center for Law, Technology & the Arts Conference Case Western Reserve University School of Law The Spangenberg Centre on Law, Technology and the Arts held its annual conference on the issue of Intellectual Property, Traditional Knowledge, and Folklore. Focusing on the international aspects of the issue with a US perspective, the conference seeks to revisit and re-examine the theoretical discomfort, and sometimes outright rejection of the possibility of protection of GR, TK and Folklore in mainstream intellectual property discourse in developed countries. The conference will have a multidisciplinary approach drawing on scholarship in intellectual property, cultural and human rights, history and political science and anthropology. After a hiatus of almost 2 years, the 2015 WIPO General Assembly renewed the mandate of WIPO’s Intergovernmental Committee on Intellectual Property and Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and Folklore (IGC) to resume negotiations on an international instrument for the protection of traditional knowledge. In the interim, national and regional legislation on the protection of genetic resources (GR), Traditional Knowledge (TK) and folklore has proliferated in developing countries, largely modeled on the options in the draft text on protection of TK and protection of folklore developed at WIPO. However, in developed countries like the US, Australia and Canada there nevertheless remain significant stakeholders with an interest in such protection, in particular, Native American tribes, Australian Aboriginal peoples and Canadian First Nations, and yet legislation on protection for GR, TK and Folklore has not been forthcoming. A major reason for this lies in the relatively rigid and calcified nature and history of intellectual property protection in such developed economies, making it much more difficult to graft new sui generis forms of protection onto the ...
format Text
author Case Western Reserve University School of Law
author_facet Case Western Reserve University School of Law
author_sort Case Western Reserve University School of Law
title Who Owns Tradition? (Part 3)
title_short Who Owns Tradition? (Part 3)
title_full Who Owns Tradition? (Part 3)
title_fullStr Who Owns Tradition? (Part 3)
title_full_unstemmed Who Owns Tradition? (Part 3)
title_sort who owns tradition? (part 3)
publisher Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons
publishDate 2016
url https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/law_videos_general/555
https://youtu.be/s4CRJEITkwk
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Conferences and Symposia
op_relation https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/law_videos_general/555
https://youtu.be/s4CRJEITkwk
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