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Traditional Knowledge (TK).

TK Meetings

 
Date Location Title M
4-6 Feb 2004 Geneva, Switzerland UNCTAD-Commonwealth Secretariat Workshop on Elements of National Sui Generis Systems for the Preservation, Protection and Promotion of Traditional Knowledge, Innovations and Practices and Options for an International Framework More
3-5 April 2002 Delhi, India Seminar on Traditional Knowledge organized by the Government of India in co-operation with the UNCTAD secretariat More
30 Oct - 1 Nov 2000 Geneva, Switzerland Expert Meeting on Systems and National Experiences for Protecting Traditional Knowledge, Innovation and Practices More

TK Coordinators

 
Name Position
Email, tel, fax
Sophia Twarog Economic Affairs Officer sophia.twarog@unctad.org tel: +41 (0)22 917 5082 Fax: +41 (0)22 917 0247
Andrew Stevenson Economic Affairs Officer andrew.stevenson@unctad.org tel: Fax:

Issues

The importance of protecting the knowledge, innovations and practices of indigenous and local communities (TK) is increasingly recognized in international forums. The immediate task is to ensure that the benefits of cumulative innovation associated with TK accrue to their holders while enhancing their socio-economic development. Frequently TK is used and appropriated without the prior informed consent of the holders.

TK is valuable first and foremost to TK-holding local communities who depend upon it for their livelihoods and well-being, as well as for enabling them to sustainably manage their local ecosystems. According to the World Health Organization, up to 80 per cent of the world's population depends on traditional medicine for its primary health needs. In India, for example, there are 600,000 licensed medical practitioners of classical traditional health systems and over one million traditional community-based health workers. Over 90 per cent of food in sub-Saharan Africa is produced using customary farming practices. For those comprising the poorest segments of societies, particularly women, indigenous people and rural inhabitants of developing countries, traditional knowledge is indispensable for survival. This is especially true in many LDCs.

TK benefits national economies and has the potential to benefit them still further. Such TK-based products as handicrafts, medicinal plants, traditional agricultural products, and non-wood forest products (NWFPs) are traded in both domestic and international markets and already provide substantial benefits for exporter countries. For example, some 150 NWFPs, including rattan, cork, essential oils, forest nuts, and gum arabic, are traded internationally in significant quantities. TK is also used as an input into modern industries such as pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, agriculture, food additives, industrial enzymes, biopesticides, and personal care. In this case, most of the value added is captured by firms based in developed countries whose advanced scientific and technological capabilities make this possible.

Possible instruments for the protection of TK include traditional/customary law, modern intellectual property rights instruments, sui generis systems, documentation of TK, and instruments directly linked to benefit-sharing. In addition to national systems, the protection of TK and equitable sharing of the benefits derived from the use of biodiversity resources and associated TK may also require measures by user countries and cooperation at the multilateral level. While protection of TK is necessary, it is not sufficient to foster its preservation and further development. To harness TK for development and trade, developing countries need assistance to build national capacities in terms of raising awareness on the importance and potential of TK for development and trade; developing institutional and consultative mechanisms on TK protection and TK-based innovation; and facilitating the identification and marketing of TK-based products and services