Norm conflicts as governance challenges for Seed Commons: Comparing cases from Germany and the Philippines

A Seed Commons approach can help to highlight the common struggle of diverse seed initiatives in the Global North and South in light of the dominant pathway of enclosure and commodification of seeds that threatens food sovereignty and cultivated plant-genetic diversity. In this paper, the Seed Commo...

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Main Author: Julia Tschersich
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-03-01
Series:Earth System Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S258981162100001X
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spelling doaj-d2e67caebf6e47f5848346357d5c83df2021-05-02T05:57:21ZengElsevierEarth System Governance2589-81162021-03-017100097Norm conflicts as governance challenges for Seed Commons: Comparing cases from Germany and the PhilippinesJulia Tschersich0Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg, Department of Economics and Law, Ammerländer Heerstraße 114-118, 26111, Oldenburg, GermanyA Seed Commons approach can help to highlight the common struggle of diverse seed initiatives in the Global North and South in light of the dominant pathway of enclosure and commodification of seeds that threatens food sovereignty and cultivated plant-genetic diversity. In this paper, the Seed Commons framework is applied to show how the conflicting norms and rules of the international regime complex surrounding seeds shape the scope of action for Seed Commons in Germany and the Philippines. The analysis shows that the patent and variety protection regimes have strongly influenced the design of national seed marketing and threaten to outlaw practices of Seed Commons. Despite limited practical impact for Seed Commons initiatives (so far), the norms of the Nagoya Protocol and the Seed Treaty have contributed to exceptions in national seed marketing law that provide essential scope of action for Seed Commons initiatives in Europe and the Philippines.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S258981162100001XSeed commonsRegime complexNorm interplayBiodiversity governanceIntellectual property rightsAccess and benefit sharing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julia Tschersich
spellingShingle Julia Tschersich
Norm conflicts as governance challenges for Seed Commons: Comparing cases from Germany and the Philippines
Earth System Governance
Seed commons
Regime complex
Norm interplay
Biodiversity governance
Intellectual property rights
Access and benefit sharing
author_facet Julia Tschersich
author_sort Julia Tschersich
title Norm conflicts as governance challenges for Seed Commons: Comparing cases from Germany and the Philippines
title_short Norm conflicts as governance challenges for Seed Commons: Comparing cases from Germany and the Philippines
title_full Norm conflicts as governance challenges for Seed Commons: Comparing cases from Germany and the Philippines
title_fullStr Norm conflicts as governance challenges for Seed Commons: Comparing cases from Germany and the Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Norm conflicts as governance challenges for Seed Commons: Comparing cases from Germany and the Philippines
title_sort norm conflicts as governance challenges for seed commons: comparing cases from germany and the philippines
publisher Elsevier
series Earth System Governance
issn 2589-8116
publishDate 2021-03-01
description A Seed Commons approach can help to highlight the common struggle of diverse seed initiatives in the Global North and South in light of the dominant pathway of enclosure and commodification of seeds that threatens food sovereignty and cultivated plant-genetic diversity. In this paper, the Seed Commons framework is applied to show how the conflicting norms and rules of the international regime complex surrounding seeds shape the scope of action for Seed Commons in Germany and the Philippines. The analysis shows that the patent and variety protection regimes have strongly influenced the design of national seed marketing and threaten to outlaw practices of Seed Commons. Despite limited practical impact for Seed Commons initiatives (so far), the norms of the Nagoya Protocol and the Seed Treaty have contributed to exceptions in national seed marketing law that provide essential scope of action for Seed Commons initiatives in Europe and the Philippines.
topic Seed commons
Regime complex
Norm interplay
Biodiversity governance
Intellectual property rights
Access and benefit sharing
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S258981162100001X
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