Geoff Tansey

Seeds of contention, control or diversity?

Global rules, intellectual property and the future control of food

This talk discusses briefly the changing global rules on biodiversity, plant genetic resources and intellectual propertyand their impact on the future control of food.

Please respond to a 60 sec survery after watching - Click here to take survey

Running order:

Introduction: 0 - 1 minute 41 seconds

Part 1. Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD): 1 min 41 sec - 3 min 45 sec

Part 2. The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA): 3 min 45 - 7 min 25 sec

Part 3. Intellectual property and the World Trade Organisation: 7 min 25 sec - 19 min 34 sec

Part 4. The UPOV Convention: 19 min 34 sec - 25 min 14 sec

Part 5. World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO): 25 min 14 sec - 30 min 51 sec

Part 6. Responding to change: 30 min 51 sec - end

Download transcript

Return to talks list page

Further reading

All of the issues discussed in this talk are examined more fully, with many references for further reading, in Geoff Tansey and Tasmin Rajotte, The Future Control of Food - A Guide to International Negotiations and Rules on Intellectual Property, Biodiversity and Food Security, Earthscan, London, 2008 and also available to download in English, Spanish and Chinese - click here for links.

For a comprehensive guide to the TRIPS Agreement see UNCTAD-ICTSD (2005) Resource Book on TRIPS and Development, Cambridge University Press. Also available in full here.

This is the World Bank report referred to in the video: World Bank (1998) Knowledge for Development - World Development Report 1998/99, OUP.

If you want to see the paper that kicked all of this off for me, see Tansey, G. (1999) Trade, Intellectual Property, Food and Biodiversity: Key issues and options for the 1999 review of Article 27.3(b) of the TRIPS Agreement, QUNO, Discussion Paper, Geneva. This and other papers arsing from my work with the Quakers are available here.

You can see Phil Howard's animated graphic on growing concentration in the seed industry and his other work here. For an article providing more detail on earlier versions of these graphics see: Howard, Philip H. 2009. Visualizing Consolidation in the Global Seed Industry: 1996–2008. Sustainability, 1(4), 1266-1287.

Chang, H.-J. (2002), Kicking Away the Ladder – Development Strategy in Historical Perspective,
London: Anthem Press.

Links

Bioversity International - The world's largest international research organization dedicated solely to the conservation and use of agricultural biodiversity.

Bridges - Trade news from a sustainable development perspective.

Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) - The United Nations convention on the promotion, protection, and preservation of global biological diversity.

ETC Group (Erosion, Technology and Concentration Group) - Dedicated to the conservation and sustainable advancement of cultural and ecological diversity and human rights.

Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) - This United Nations organization leads international efforts to defeat hunger. It is host to the secretariat for the The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture.

Food Ethics Council (FEC) - Challenges government, business and society to make wise choices that lead to better food and farming. The FEC produced a report TRIPS with Everything from which the graphic on complex institutions is taken and from which the football pitch graphic is drawn.

Genetic Resources Action International (GRAIN) - An international non-governmental organisation (NGO) which promotes the sustainable management and use of agricultural biodiversity based on people's control over genetic resources and local knowledge.

International Seed Federation (ISF) - Represents the mainstream of the world seed trade and plant breeders community, and serves as an international forum where issues of interest to the world seed industry are discussed.

IPRsonline.org - An internet portal on Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) and Sustainable Development.

IP Watch - A non-profit independent news service, which reports on the interests and behind-the-scenes dynamics that influence the design and implementation of international intellectual property policies.

La Via Campesina - An international movement which coordinates peasant organizations of small and medium sized producers, agricultural workers, rural women, and indigenous communities from Asia, America, and Europe.

Quaker United National Office (QUNO), Geneva - Promotes informed and balanced discussion about what - if any - kind of intellectual property protection on seeds would best foster resilient, equitable and sustainable food systems and innovation policies.

The International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV) - Serves the Convention which has the objective of the protection of new varieties of plants by an intellectual property right.

The South Centre - Works to assist in developing points of view of the South on major policy issues. It produces an IP negotiations monitor

World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations focussed on intellectual property.

World Trade Organization (WTO) is the only global international organisation dealing with the rules of trade between nations. You can download the full text of the TRIPS Agreement here

 

Background

This is the second of my three talks for the virtual academy on transforming our food systems - a public good, open education resource. These talks are to help you increase your understanding of our food systems – where they came from, how they change, what the challenges are and how to meet them. The contributors recognise that the need is to transform today’s systems, which leave huge numbers of people malnourished and whose sustainability is highly questionable, but that to do so requires thinking and action beyond food systems themselves. Read more

Dramatic treatment

Listen to This Land a play by Alistair McDowall that deals with some of the issues raised in this talk. It is one of four plays produced in spring 2014 at the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester as part of the Hunger for Trade project. Overseen by the Schauspielhaus in Hamburg, Hunger for Trade is an international and inter-cultural performing arts response to the global food crisis, created in collaboration between nine theatres across four continents.

Usage

This video is an open education resource that is unrestricted in non-commercial use (for commercial purposes or in commercial organisations permission is needed). If in doubt please contact me. Please respond to the survey as this feedback will help in taking this 'virtual academy' work further. Suggestions for further materials to be linked to this page or added to this series are also welcome. If you want to arrange for follow-up discussions with me via the internet – over Skype or some other service - after using the talk in a class please contact me.