Protecting Traditional Knowledge through Biocultural Community Protocols in Madagascar: Do Not Forget the "B" in BCP

被引:7
|
作者
Rakotondrabe, Manohisoa [1 ]
Girard, Fabien [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Grenoble Alpes, Fac Law, CRJ, F-38400 Grenoble, France
关键词
Madagascar; traditional knowledge; biocultural community protocol; development process; genetic resources; phytogenetic resources for food and agriculture; local community right; NATURAL-RESOURCES; COLLECTIVE ACTION; BIODIVERSITY; STEWARDSHIP; CONSERVATION; GOVERNANCE; POLITICS; ACCESS; FOREST; RIGHTS;
D O I
10.3390/su131810255
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
As in many other countries in the south, the traditional knowledge (TK) of local communities in Madagascar is facing extinction. Biocultural community protocols (BCP), introduced in Madagascar following the implementation of the Nagoya Protocol (2010) and defined by the Mo'otz Kuxtal Voluntary Guidelines as "a wide range of expressions, articulations, rules and practices produced by communities to indicate how they wish to engage in negotiations with stakeholders", holds out hopes for TK protection. By analysing two pilot BCPs in Madagascar, one established around the Motrobe (Cinnamosma fragrans) with a view to strengthening the existing value chain (BCP in Mariarano and Betsako) and the second initially established around plant genetic resources for food and agriculture (BCP of the farmers in Analavory), this study aims to assess the place and value ascribed to TK in the overall BCP development process and to analyse whether or not the process has helped to strengthen and revitalise TK at the community level. The ethnographic studies show commonalities in both BCP, in particular their main focus on access and benefit-sharing mechanisms, this against the backdrop of an economic model which stresses the importance of financial and institutional incentives; and conversely, a relative disregard for what relates to the biocultural dimension of TK. Local taboos (fady) as well as traditional dina (social conventions), which have long allowed for the regulation of access to common resources/TK, are scarcely mentioned. Based on these findings, we conclude that in order to revitalise TK, the process of developing BCPs should recognise and give special importance to TK, considering it as a biocultural whole, bound together with the territory, local customs, and biological resources; or else, TK is likely to remain a commodity to be valued economically, or a component like any other.
引用
收藏
页数:36
相关论文
共 14 条
  • [11] Climate change adaptation through traditional Buffalo knowledge: learning reflection from the Blackfoot indigenous community
    Datta, Ranjan
    Starlight, Teena
    Chapola, Jebunnessa
    LOCAL ENVIRONMENT, 2024, 29 (08) : 1085 - 1098
  • [12] Use and traditional knowledge of Byrsonima crassifolia and B. coccolobifolia (Malpighiaceae) in a Makuxi community of the Roraima savanna, northern Brazil
    Costa de Oliveira, Rodrigo Leonardo
    Scudeller, Veridiana Vizoni
    Barbosa, Reinaldo Imbrozio
    ACTA AMAZONICA, 2017, 47 (02) : 133 - 140
  • [13] Increasing Knowledge and Traditional Use of Medicinal Plants by Local Communities in Tamil Nadu: Promoting Self-Reliance at the Grassroots Level Through a Community-Based Entrepreneurship Initiative
    Torri, Maria Costanza
    JOURNAL OF EVIDENCE-BASED INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE, 2010, 15 (01): : 40 - 51
  • [14] Traditional knowledge of artisanal Fishers and<it> Sotalia</it><it> guianensis</it> (Van B acute accent en acute accent eden, 1864) (Cetacea, Delphinidae) in the Extractive Reserve Baia do Tubara tilde o (Brazilian Amazon coast)
    Filgueira, Carlos
    Zappes, Camilah
    Vidal, Marcelo
    Nunes, Jorge
    OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT, 2021, 210 (210)