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| Call for Argentine
register of local knowledge |
| Valeria Roman |
| Date posted: 21 Mar
2003 |
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Call for
Argentine register of local knowledge
Valeria Roman

An indigenous leader, alongside
representatives of INPI,
reading the declaration that calls for the registration
of traditional knowledge
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[BUENOS AIRES] Indigenous communities from
Argentina have urged the creation of a register of their traditional
knowledge in a bid to stop foreign companies from using such knowledge
for commercial gain without returning any benefits to local people.
A group of 44 indigenous leaders meeting in Buenos Aires last month
signed a declaration calling on the National Institute of Industrial
Property (INPI) — the government organisation responsible for
implementing intellectual property laws — to set up such an
initiative.
INPI director Mario Roberto Aramburu says that “the Institute is
evaluating how the proposal could be carried out and is analysing what
would be the best format” [for the register].
The proposal is that indigenous communities could choose to share the
knowledge in the register free of charge, or could sell the rights to
use the knowledge to other people or companies. The register would
also provide a way for indigenous communities to prove their 'prior
knowledge’ of a particular technique if a company tried to take out
a patent on its scientific basis. Indigenous communities from outside
Argentina would also be allowed to register their intellectual
property as part of the initiative.
“We approved the declaration because we want to stop our economic
impoverishment while non-indigenous people enrich themselves with our
knowledge”, says Sapallitan Pereyra, a member of the Tonocote group,
a community of 4,000 individuals in the province of Santiago del
Estero, in the north of Argentina.
“With the national register, we want to prevent the abuse and
robbery of our traditional knowledge”, she says. The register would
cover a variety of types of traditional knowledge, including the use
of medicinal plants, music and images. The declaration was approved by
representatives of 90 per cent of the more than one million indigenous
people in Argentina.
According to Teodora Zamudio, a professor at the University of Buenos
Aires School of Law and president of Prodiversitas, a non-governmental
organisation that works to protect biodiversity, in making these
demands, indigenous communities are simply calling for the proper
implementation of existing laws designed to protect their historical
and cultural knowledge.
“For centuries, indigenous communities have produced many
intellectual creations," she says. "But these creations do
not fall into the same [legal] category as inventions. For this
reason, indigenous production needs its own copyright category”.
Zamudio points out that many sandals, belts and other handicrafts sold
in Buenos Aires carry the traditional designs of indigenous people in
South America, but the business is carried out without the consent of
those who developed these designs.
Similarly, she says, the Aymará group in northern Argentina has not
received any benefit from music they have developed which is widely
used in a form of psychotherapy.
Source: SciDev.Net
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See also:
National Institute
of Industrial Property
Prodiversitas

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