Corporate theft of ‘traditional knowledge’: Biopiracy by another name
The Subcontinent's inheritance of traditional knowledge and methods is safe. Think again.
Thirty years after developing countries were first made to believe that their economic interests were perfectly safe in collecting and conserving quickly disappearing plant germplasm, the global bosses are at it again. However, instead of the biological inheritance, this time it is traditional knowledge that the international community is suddenly so concerned and worried about.
Once again, the same emotional rhetoric fills the air. Traditional knowledge, which has been passed on from generation to generation by local and tribal communities in the developing world, is getting lost. This knowledge might soon be lost to posterity, denying humanity its rightful inheritance. The answer, we are told, is to document the traditional knowledge, which is, after all, all of mankind's heritage.