Source: Carolina
Academic Press website
http://www.cap-press.com/books/1431
Seed Wars is a
comprehensive overview of the current domestic and
international legal controversies regarding
intellectual property protections for plant genetic
resources (PGRs) over the past three decades. This
book examines these controversies on three fronts:
- (1) the rise
of intellectual property protections for plant
varieties and the enclosure of the “genetic”
commons;
- (2) the
subsequent move of the agro-chemical industry
from manufacturing fertilizers, pesticides, and
herbicides to “manufacturing” seeds in the
context of industrial agriculture; and
- (3) the
emergence of overlapping regimes of domestic and
multilateral treaties such as the Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS, 1994),
the Convention on Biodiversity (CBD, 1992) and
the International Treaty on Plant Genetic
Resources (ITPGR, 2004) from the 1990s on.
Finally, this book
speculates on possible directions that intellectual
property protection for PGRs may take in the 21st
century.
While intellectual property protection for plants
has been available in the United States since 1930,
the decade of the 1960s saw the rise of Plant
Variety Protections in Europe and by 1980, the U.S.
Supreme Court embraced the idea that living
organisms could be patented, paving the way for new
plant varieties to receive utility patent protection
in the U.S. |