Business Daily Media

Men's Weekly

.

Patently insufficient: a new intellectual property treaty does little to protect Māori traditional knowledge

  • Written by David Jefferson, Senior Lecturer Above the Bar, University of Canterbury
Patently insufficient: a new intellectual property treaty does little to protect Māori traditional knowledge

The problem of “biopiracy[1]” – the misappropriation and patenting for profit of Indigenous knowledge – has been on the rise for some time. So a global treaty aimed at protecting traditional knowledge and genetic resources should be a welcome development.

In late May, the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO[2]) adopted the Treaty on Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources and Traditional Knowledge[3]. It is the first international agreement on intellectual property that includes provisions on Indigenous peoples’ knowledge.

More than 20 years in the making, it represents the culmination of negotiations between the 193 WIPO member states since 2000. And on the face of it, the treaty appears to be an important intervention to prevent biopiracy.

However, the new agreement is unlikely to lead to major changes to New Zealand law, or improve the rights of Māori to own or control their intellectual property and taonga[4] (treasured possessions). Given the well-documented misappropriation of Māori knowledge and taonga, more substantive protections are still needed.

Disclosure of origin

Several studies have found instances of non-Māori businesses seeking patents[5] and plant variety rights[6] for the use of native plants similar to known Māori practices.

In these cases, several of which relate to mānuka[7], there is no evidence Māori were consulted or gave permission for their mātauranga (traditional knowledge) to be used.

The WIPO treaty introduces a “disclosure of origin” requirement. Where patent claims cover genetic resources, applicants must disclose the country of origin or source of those resources.

Furthermore, where the claimed invention is based on traditional knowledge, applicants must disclose which Indigenous peoples, local communities or other sources provided the knowledge.

While this has been heralded as a “historic[8]” step forward, the Intellectual Property Office of New Zealand (IPONZ[9]) already requires patent applicants to indicate whether their application involves traditional knowledge, or might conflict with Māori interests.

Not that new for NZ

IPONZ can then decide to send the application to the Patents Māori Advisory Committee, which advises on whether an invention is derived from Māori traditional knowledge or from indigenous plants or animals.

If it is, the committee also advises on whether the commercial exploitation of that invention might be contrary to Māori values. IPONZ then uses this advice to decide if an application should be rejected on the basis of “morality or public order”.

In other words, the disclosure-of-origin requirement is not such a historic step as some might imagine, at least for Aotearoa New Zealand. That said, the WIPO treaty will require appropriate measures to be implemented in domestic law to address any failure to provide the information.

The possible sanctions or remedies are limited, however. The treaty states that, unless there is fraudulent behaviour, a granted patent cannot be revoked, invalidated or rendered unenforceable due to a failure to disclose.

Still, this is better than the current situation, where there are no sanctions or remedies for failure to disclose.

WIPO Director General Daren Tang (right) celebrates the signing of the new treaty to combat ‘biopiracy’, Geneva, May 24. Getty Images

Earlier drafts went further

Arguably, the new treaty is notable more for what it does not do. In fact, earlier drafts[10] of the treaty articles, released in 2023, went further than the eventual text does.

These included a framework under which traditional knowledge itself could be protected as the intellectual property of Indigenous peoples and local communities. This would have provided them with exclusive collective rights to control their traditional knowledge.

The draft articles also proposed Indigenous peoples and local communities would have the right to receive a fair and equitable share of benefits from the use of their traditional knowledge. They would also have the right of attribution, and the right to use their traditional knowledge in a manner that respects its integrity.

The final treaty does not include this form of positive protection for Indigenous knowledge. It also fails to protect “traditional cultural expressions” – the forms in which Indigenous peoples or local communities express their traditional cultural practices and knowledge, including music, dance, art and handicrafts.

Patent system sanctity

Compared with those earlier drafts, the concluded treaty is significantly narrower and less substantive.

It might help prevent the misappropriation of traditional knowledge in the patent system. But the treaty does not offer a positive form of protection for traditional knowledge itself, or traditional cultural expressions.

In fact, one could argue the treaty is more about ensuring the sanctity of the patent system, than it is about protecting Indigenous knowledge. After all, patent law requires inventions to be new and inventive compared to existing knowledge.

A requirement that applicants disclose the origin of genetic resources, and the knowledge relating to those resources, only improves the patent system.

Implementing the WIPO treaty in Aotearoa New Zealand will protect the patent system from granting bad patents. But it will not protect mātauranga Māori, or ensure Māori retain tino rangatiratanga[11] (sovereignty) over their taonga, as guaranteed by te Tiriti o Waitangi (Treaty of Waitangi).

References

  1. ^ biopiracy (theconversation.com)
  2. ^ WIPO (www.wipo.int)
  3. ^ Treaty on Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources and Traditional Knowledge (www.wipo.int)
  4. ^ taonga (maoridictionary.co.nz)
  5. ^ seeking patents (onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
  6. ^ plant variety rights (onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
  7. ^ mānuka (www.elgaronline.com)
  8. ^ historic (www.wipo.int)
  9. ^ IPONZ (www.iponz.govt.nz)
  10. ^ earlier drafts (www.wipo.int)
  11. ^ tino rangatiratanga (maoridictionary.co.nz)

Authors: David Jefferson, Senior Lecturer Above the Bar, University of Canterbury

Read more https://theconversation.com/patently-insufficient-a-new-intellectual-property-treaty-does-little-to-protect-maori-traditional-knowledge-231264

RogersDigital.com Announces the Launch of TheBulletin.au, a Destination for Business, Policy and Financial Insight

RogersDigital.com has announced the launch of TheBulletin.au, a new national digital publication designed to deliver sharp, data-driven reporting ...

Controlling business spend is helping finance leaders to forecast with confidence

Forecasting has always been central to financial planning; however, traditional methods based on historical trends are no longer enough. Economic ...

From correction to resilience: making the most of Australia’s evolving insurance landscape

Australia is benefiting from one of the most favourable insurance market environments seen in years. However, it’s important to recognise that these...

AI is Changing Trademarking Forever

The launch of ChatGPT in 2022 marked a turning point for AI. In three short years, AI has been integrated into everything from our phone cameras to ...

Times Media Australia Launches Times Australia Today

A New National Digital Publication Designed to Make Sense of Modern Australia Sydney, Australia — 26 November 2025 — Times Media Australia today an...

The Future of Ozi.com.au

Ozi.com.au: The New Benchmark in Australian Digital Services In a digital landscape evolving at breakneck speed, Australian businesses are demand...

hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink หวยออนไลน์betsmovemavibetvozol türkiyePusulabet Girişสล็อตเว็บตรงgamdom girişpadişahbetMostbetbetofficemavibetcarros usadospin upMostbetdizipalholiganbet girişnn888pradabettipobetjojobetcasibomjojobet girişjojobet girişbetofficetipobet girişpusulabetpusulabetholiganbet色情 film izlejojobetnakitbahisJojobet 1106pusulabet girişpusulabet girişpusulabet girişmatbetYakabet1xbet girişjojobetGrandpashabetFİXBETgobahistrendbetbetofficekingroyaljojobet girişgiftcardmall/mygiftultrabet girişmatbetbets10palacebetmamibetmadridbetcasibomkingroyalbetcioslot spacemaniptvcasibomcasibomJojobetkingroyalmadridbetcasibomdeneme bonusumeritkingyakabetcasibom girişcasibombetciobetcioultrabetSekabetCasibommadridbetsekabetDinamobetrinabetVdcasinobetpuanMarsbahisatlasbetultrabet girişprimebahismeritking girişprimebahismeritkingholiganbetultrabetultrabetultrabetcasibombetnanoaresbetSahabetmr pachocasibomcasibomcolor pickerpusulabetvbettipobet girişmatbet girişpusulabet girişbetsmove girişbetsmove girişbetsmove girişholiganbet girişgalabet girişคลิปหลุดไทยCasibomcasibomvaycasinodeneme bonusu veren siteleronwinonwinizmir escorttimebetkonya escorthttps://bogaria-atelier.com/bahsegelgrandbettinggrandbettinggrandbettingbets10 girişbets10 güncel girişultrabetbets10matbet güncel girişRoyal Reelsroyal reelsnorabahistipobet güncel girişKayseri Escortjojobet girişJojobetpashagamingNişantaşı EscortelexbetelexbetbettiltStreameastcasibomKalebetHoliganbetfixbetaviator gameÜsküdar Evden Eve Nakliyattimebettimebettimebetbahislionistanbul escort telegrambetparkcasibompantheraproject.netcasibompusulabetbetplay girişbetplaymatbet girişvaycasinoholiganbetcasibomstreameast한국야동หวยออนไลน์jojobet girişholiganbet girişpornopadişahbetBetigmabetparkBetigmaBetlora girişgaziantep escorteb7png pokiesbest online casino australiabest online pokies australiareal money pokies online australiabcgame96 casinocrown155 hk casinohb88kh casinoHoliganbetkavbetpadişahbetgalabetholiganbet girişbetasuscasibombets10bets10setrabetholiganbetolimposcasinocasinomegaJojobet 1106splasharesbetblooketasyabahis girişpinbahis girişdeneme bonusu telegramdumanbet girişmatbetStreameastmostbetdaftar situs judi slot gacor hb88 indonesiamostbetmostbetmostbetteosbetmeritcasinomatbetgrandpashabetjojobet giriş