Negotiations toward a Free Trade Agreement: US demands for greater IPR privileges by Jakkrit Kuanpoth | 24 Apr 2006 First uploaded in 2004 First uploaded in 2004
TRIPs Âplus approach: Implications to Thailand by Jakkrit Kuanpoth | 24 Apr 2006 Available in PDF and Flash format (by Jakkrit Kuanpoth in 2004) Available in PDF and Flash format (by Jakkrit Kuanpoth in 2004)
Peasants' Rights and Seeds: What's at Stake for Europe by | 21 Apr 2006 A report on the European Seminar on Seeds, held in Poitiers, France, November 2005. It contains the workshop results and proposals on: Access to and management of biodiversity; Obstacles in norms and marketing; Research and production methods, and Contamination of seeds by GMOs. A report on the European Seminar on Seeds, held in Poitiers, France, November 2005. It contains the workshop results and proposals on: Access to and management of biodiversity; Obstacles in norms and marketing; Research and production methods, and Contamination of seeds by GMOs.
Bellagio brief: Livestock biodiversity, indigenous knowledge & IPR by GRAIN | 14 Apr 2006 BIO-IPR (1997-2009)
The top-down global response to bird flu by GRAIN | 12 Apr 2006 The global response to bird flu is devastating small farmers and biodiversity. A new report from GRAIN looks at the power politics behind this global response and its consequences for the poor. The report, building on a previous GRAIN briefing on bird flu from March 2006, finds that the agencies of the United Nations at the forefront of the international response to the virus, the World Health Organisation and the Food and Agriculture Organisation, are pursuing top-down strategies for wiping out bird flu that in-turn are wiping out the foundations for long term, pro-poor solutions in the process. The global response to bird flu is devastating small farmers and biodiversity. A new report from GRAIN looks at the power politics behind this global response and its consequences for the poor. The report, building on a previous GRAIN briefing on bird flu from March 2006, finds that the agencies of the United Nations at the forefront of the international response to the virus, the World Health Organisation and the Food and Agriculture Organisation, are pursuing top-down strategies for wiping out bird flu that in-turn are wiping out the foundations for long term, pro-poor solutions in the process.
Article 27.3(b), relationship between the TRIPS Agreement and the CBD, and the protection of traditional knowledge and folklore by USA | 13 Mar 2006