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Book Description

Advances in research and development reveal the immense diversity and potential of marine genetic resources. Under international law, no specific regime applies to these complex and paradoxical objects of use. The Law of the Sea Convention sets a framework that is partly inadequate for this new category of resources. The Biodiversity Convention and the Nagoya Protocol only address the genetic resources of national areas. Patents allow their holder to exercise a monopoly on exploiting biotechnological creations to extensive claims, questioning the common nature of biodiversity and related knowledge. They hinder research and the objectives of biodiversity law. The legal and practical rules of physical and functional access vary in geometry. They focus on the valorization of research results, crystallizing conflicts of interest between suppliers and users. Sustainable research and development is essential to the knowledge and protection of marine biodiversity. The qualification of marine genetic resources in common, standard contractual tools, distributed research and development infrastructures, negotiation of an agreement on sustainable use and conservation of biodiversity beyond the limits of national jurisdiction, would To remove these inconsistencies.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Foreword
  3. Introduction
    1. I.1. The notion of marine genetic resources
    2. I.2. The increasing value of the knowledge associated with marine genetic resources in light of knowledge economy
    3. I.3. The utilization of marine genetic resources: mixed and random R&D activities
    4. I.4. Law applicable for using marine genetic resources
  4. 1 The Scientific Representation of the Living World: A Dual Concept Between Nature’s and Humans’ Shares
    1. 1.1. Natural sciences: the given living world
    2. 1.2. Life sciences: the constructed living world
  5. PART 1: Singular Objects Moving Toward Reservation
    1. 2 Exploitable Raw Materials
      1. 2.1. Genetic material: natural resources defined according to their conditions of appropriation
      2. 2.2. Marine genetic resources: biological resources defined according to their destination
    2. 3 Patentable Biotechnological Inventions
      1. 3.1. The patentability of life of any origin: an established principle
      2. 3.2. The patentability of life in all its forms: a questionable reality
  6. PART 2: Global Objects Moving Toward Sharing
    1. 4 Residual Res Communes
      1. 4.1. Res communes due to disinterest
      2. 4.2. Common resources at risk
    2. 5 Reconstructing the Commons
      1. 5.1. Renewal of the commons in a context of global interdependencies
      2. 5.2. An attempt to apply renewed figures of the commons to marine biodiversity and associated knowledge
  7. Conclusion
  8. Appendices
    1. Appendix 1: Classical Marine Bioprospecting: Biochemistry and Genetic Engineering
    2. Appendix 2: Modern Marine Bioprospecting: Metagenomics
    3. Appendix 3: The Drug Research and Development Steps
    4. Appendix 4: Risk Assessment in the Bioprospecting Process
    5. Appendix 5: Aleatory Component Comparison in Fishing and Bioprospecting
    6. Appendix 6: Patent Claims Over Genes of Marine Origin
    7. Appendix 7: Illustrative Database on Marine Biotechnological Innovations
  9. Bibliography
  10. Index
  11. End User License Agreement
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