A/HRC/20/26
competition, and facilitates new drug combinations for simpler treatment. The UNITAID
Medicines Patent Pool, for example, encourages new generic formulations by facilitating
patent-sharing and streamlining the production of new medicines in currently
underresearched areas. A new royalty-free license for patents on the HIV/AIDS
antiretroviral drug Darunavir introduced by the United States National Institutes of Health
led to Gilead Science licensing its patents on several drugs to the Patent Pool.
63.
In the field of agricultural biotechnology, initiatives include the multi-country Public
Intellectual Property Resource for Agriculture, in which more than 40 public institutions
seek to lower barriers created by intellectual property regimes and to facilitate technology
transfer. Research is also encouraged by such open-source experiments as the Biological
Open Source (BiOS) License, which offers researchers free access to key technologies
provided that they share any improvements made to these tools under the BiOS open source
license regime.71
64.
A separate, often raised concern relates to the threat posed by “bioprospecting” for
traditional knowledge of indigenous peoples and other local communities. In response,
many States are developing databases for the documentation and conservation of traditional
knowledge. Interesting models for protecting traditional knowledge from misappropriation
include
the
India
Traditional
Knowledge
Digital
Library
(www.tkdl.res.in/tkdl/langdefault/common/), which provides national patent offices with
access to 223,000 indigenous medicinal formulations. As a result, at least two patents have
been withdrawn and more than 75 applications withdrawn, rejected or amended. Some
States, such as, Brazil, Guatemala, Peru and Portugal, have taken measures to give legal
protection to the rights of indigenous peoples and local communities to their accumulated
scientific knowledge. Further discussion is needed, however, on the modalities and
conditions under which others should benefit from such accumulated knowledge, and how
to allow further development and dissemination of such knowledge while safeguarding the
moral and material interests of the individual or collective creators. Agrobiodiversity,
maintained and transmitted as a common public good by local farmers, also needs to be
addressed.72 WIPO is currently conducting “text-based negotiations” with a view to
reaching an agreement on an international legal instrument(s) which “will ensure the
effective protection of genetic resources, traditional knowledge and traditional cultural
expressions”.73
65.
The Special Rapporteur points out that legal scholars have increasingly questioned
the economic effectiveness of intellectual property regimes in promoting scientific and
cultural innovation. Scholars have found no evidence to support the assumption that
scientific creativity is only galvanized by legal protection or that the short-term costs of
limiting dissemination are lower than the long-term gain of additional incentives.
Consequently, the Special Rapporteur proposes the adoption of a public good approach to
knowledge innovation and diffusion, and suggests reconsidering the current maximalist
intellectual property approach to explore the virtues of a minimalist approach to IP
protection.74 Recalibrating intellectual property norms that may present a barrier to the right
71
72
73
74
De Schutter (see footnote 19).
De Schutter, op. cit.
WIPO submission, p. 17.
See in particular Shaver, “The right to science and culture” (see footnote 6), pp. 128 and 159-160;
Yochai Benkler, The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Market and Freedoms,
New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 2006, p. 36; James Boyle, The Public Domain:
Enclosing the Commons of the Mind, Yale University Press, 2008, and Joseph E. Stiglitz,
“Knowledge as a global public good”, in Global Public Goods: International Cooperation in the 21st
Century, Inge Kaul et al. eds., UNDP, New York, Oxford University Press, 1999, pp. 308–09.
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