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Farmers Rights: Intellectual Property Regimes and the Struggle over Seedspolitical science department at Haverford College This article analyzes "farmers rights" as a strategy of resistance against the perceived inequities of intellectual property rights regimes for plant varieties. As commercial models of intellectual property have made their way into agriculture, farmers traditional seed-saving practices have been increasingly delegitimized. In response, farmers have adopted the language of farmers rights to demand greater material recognition of their contributions and better measures to protect their autonomy. This campaign has mixed implications. On one hand, farmersrights are a unique form of right that may help transform conventions of intellectual property in ways that are better suited for registering and materially encouraging alternative forms of innovation, such as those offered by farming communities. On the other hand, farmers rights have proved enormously difficult to enact. And by situating farmersrights alongside easily enacted commercial breedersrights, the campaign risks further legitimizing the inequities it is responding to.
Key Words: farmersrights indigenous knowledge intellectual property development discourse TRIPS
Politics & Society, Vol. 32, No. 4,
511-543 (2004) |
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