How to protect the rights of indigenous peoples to prior informed consent and benefit sharing in respect of medical interventions or scientific research in the ‘Global Biomedical Convention’ : Lessons from International Biodiversity Law and Biopiracy Case
Resumen
Biological resources and associated traditional knowledge of indigenous peoples have long been exploited by multinational corporations for their profits with little or no acknowledgement of and compensation for them and it is called ‘biopiracy’. Not just their natural resources and associated knowledge but their own genetic information or genes in their bodies have also been the target of the scientists who are seeking to trace human history or cure disease by investigating human genes.
Thus, to combat biopiracy, a number of international agreements such as the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) have been adopted and benefit sharing agreements between users and providers of the resources including indigenous peoples in some biopiracy cases have shown how benefits can be shared with indigenous peoples. However, in biomedical field while plenty of piracies of genetic information of indigenous peoples have happened, no international legal binding convention has been adopted and few benefit sharing agreements have been reported, which makes it difficult to protect their rights in a coherent manner.
Thus, this paper would like to argue that a global convention in the biomedical field or the ‘Global Biomedical Convention’ which contains some provisions for the protection of the rights of indigenous peoples to their genetic information should be adopted and international biodiversity laws such as the CBD could provide some lessons in this regard. For instance, while the CBD (and Nagoya Protocol adopted under the Convention) ensures the rights of indigenous peoples to benefit sharing, few benefit sharing provisions have been provided in international biomedical laws.[1] In addition, as some biopiracy cases such as Hoodia case provide a good benefit sharing experience, such biopiracy cases could provide useful practical lessons for the protection of the rights of indigenous peoples to their genetic information.
Therefore, this paper would like to suggest some key components of the provisions of the ‘Global Biomedical Convention’ regarding the protection of the rights of indigenous peoples to their genes especially focusing on their rights to prior informed consent and benefit sharing in respect of medical interventions or scientific research based on the analysis of some international biodiversity laws as well as some existing international biomedical laws. At the same time, an important biopiracy case, Hoodia case, will also be analyzed to show how indigenous peoples successfully fought against the exploitation of their natural resources because it could provide some practical lessons for the protection of the rights of indigenous peoples to their genetic information.
[1] In this paper, although there are some international biodiversity and biomedical laws, this paper would like to focus on the CBD and its Nagoya Protocol for international biodiversity law and the Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights, the Universal Declaration on the Human Genome and Human Rights and, the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine for international biomedical law because they are the most comprehensive (and representative) international laws in each field.
Descargas
Publicado
Cómo citar
Número
Sección
Licencia
Aquellos autores/as que tengan publicaciones con esta revista, aceptan los términos siguientes:- Los autores/as conservarán sus derechos de autor y garantizarán a la revista el derecho de primera publicación de su obra, el cuál estará simultáneamente sujeto a la Licencia de reconocimiento de Creative Commons que permite a terceros compartir la obra siempre que se indique su autor y su primera publicación esta revista.
- Los autores/as podrán adoptar otros acuerdos de licencia no exclusiva de distribución de la versión de la obra publicada (p. ej.: depositarla en un archivo telemático institucional o publicarla en un volumen monográfico) siempre que se indique la publicación inicial en esta revista.
- Se permite y recomienda a los autores/as difundir su obra a través de Internet (p. ej.: en archivos telemáticos institucionales o en su página web) antes y durante el proceso de envío, lo cual puede producir intercambios interesantes y aumentar las citas de la obra publicada. (Véase El efecto del acceso abierto).
- Resumen 97