TY - BOOK
T1 - Indigenous knowledge and sustainable development in the Philippines: Proceedings of a workshop held at the International Institute of Rural Reconstruction, June 24-26, 1992
Y1 - 1994
A1 - International Institute of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR)
A1 - Regional Program for the Promotion of Indigenous Knowledge in Asia
A1 - Philippine Resource Center for Sustainable Development and Indigenous Knowledge
KW - applied folklore
KW - community development
KW - congresses
KW - environmental aspects
KW - indigenous peoples
KW - Philippines
KW - social life and customs
KW - sustainable development
AB -
The conference topics covered include:
- farming
- cropping systems
- livestock
- cultural practices in agriculture
- natural resource management
- aquaculture
- human health
- indigenous organizations and common property.
PB - International Institute of Rural Reconstruction
CY - Silang, Cavite, Philippines
SN - 0-942717-48-1; 978-0-942717-48-8
UR - http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/35776619
N1 - Co-published by the Regional Program for the Promotion of Indigenous Knowledge in Asia (REPPIKA) and the Philippine Resource Center for Sustainable Development and Indigenous Knowledge (PHIRCSDIK).
General Note: Jointly funded by the International Institute of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR), Foundation for Philippine Environment (FPE), Ford Foundation (FF), and User's Perspective With Agricultural Research and Development (UPWARD)
Bibliography note: Includes bibliographical references
Collection title: CIKARD-Center for Indigenous Knowledge in Agriculture and Rural Development. Department of Anthropology, Iowa State University
JO - Indigenous knowledge and sustainable development in the Philippines
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Intellectual property rights for indigenous peoples: A sourcebook
Y1 - 1994
ED - Thomas C. Greaves
KW - developing countries
KW - ethnobotany
KW - ethnopharmacology
KW - indigenous peoples
KW - intellectual property
KW - Western hemisphere
AB - Contains following papers:
- Gifts from the creator: intellectual property rights and folk crop varieties
- Tribal sovereignty and the control of knowledge
- Collecting traditional medicines in Nigeria; A proposal for IPR compensation
- Establishing reciprocity
- Biodiversity, conservation and new models for cooperation between forest-dwelling peoples and the pharmaceutical industry
- Policies for international collaboration and compensation in drug discovery and development at the United States National Cancer Institute, The NCI Letter of Collection
- Biocultural diversity conservation through the Healing Forest Conservancy
- Buying secrets
- Federal government procurement of intellectual cultural property
- A non-market approach to protecting biological resources
- Natural products and the commercialization of traditional knowledge
- Between state and capital: NGOs as allies of indigenous peoples
- A legal paradigm for protecting traditional knowledge
- Human rights and cultural heritage, developments in the United National Working Group on Indigenous Populations
- Human rights implications of indigenous peoples' intellectual property rights
- International agreements and intellectual property right protection for indigenous peoples.
PB - Society for Applied Anthropology
CY - Oklahoma City, OK
SN - 978-0-9642023-0-6; 0-9642023-0-1
UR - http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/224715051
JO - Intellectual Property Rights for Indigenous Peoples
ER -
TY - BOOK
T1 - Developing a partnership of indigenous peoples, conservationists, and land use planners in Latin America
T2 - Policy, planning, and research working papers -- Environment (WPS 245)
Y1 - 1989
A1 - Peter Poole
KW - ache
KW - acquatic resources
KW - agriculture
KW - Alaska Whaling Commission
KW - Amboseli National Park
KW - animal protection
KW - Annapurna Conservation Project
KW - aquaculture
KW - Arctic Research Establishment
KW - Aripuana Indian Park
KW - Australia
KW - Awa Ethnic Forest Reserve
KW - Beni Biosphere Reserve
KW - Bolivia
KW - Brazil
KW - Caribou Management Boards
KW - Chile
KW - Coburg National Park
KW - Colombia
KW - Conservation of natural resources
KW - Costa Rica
KW - Cuyabeno
KW - Darien Biosphere Reserve
KW - economic conditions
KW - ecosystem management
KW - Ecuador
KW - environmental policy
KW - Eskimo Walrus Commission
KW - ethnoecology
KW - ethnology
KW - forestry
KW - Honduras
KW - Huaorani
KW - Indians of South America
KW - indigenous peoples
KW - Kakadu National Park
KW - Kenya
KW - Kuna Yala Project
KW - La Amistad Biosphere Reserve
KW - La Planada
KW - Lake Titicaca National Reserve
KW - land tenure
KW - land use planning
KW - Latin America
KW - Lauca National Park
KW - Makivik Research Center
KW - Manu National Park
KW - Mbaracayu Wildland Area
KW - Mexico
KW - national parks
KW - Native Americans
KW - Nepal
KW - NGOs
KW - non-governmental organizations
KW - oil exploration
KW - Pacaya Samira National Reserve
KW - Panama
KW - Papua New Guinea
KW - Paraguay
KW - Peru
KW - rainforests
KW - Rio Platano Biosphere Reserve
KW - Sian Ka'an Biosphere Reserve
KW - Sierra de Manantlan Biosphere Reserve
KW - Siona-Secoya
KW - sport hunting
KW - subsistence economy
KW - subsistence hunting
KW - Tagaira
KW - UNESCO
KW - usufruct rights
KW - wildlife
KW - World Bank
KW - Xingu National Park
KW - Yanomami Indian Park
KW - Yasuni National Park
AB - Policy, Planning, and Research Working Papers - Environment Recommendations for working in partnership with indigenous peoples, recognizing their land rights, incorporating their environmental knowledge into wildlands and native area planning, and paying more serious attention to the economics and resource implications of local activities to harvest wild resources - especially in environmentally delicate areas such as tropical rainforests. The major finding of the report is that a fundamental shift (a paradigm shift in the language of the historian of science Thomas Kuhn) has started in the way in which the international conservation community has come to view the issue of planning in areas which are occupied and used by indigenous peoples. Under the traditional paradigm, represented by several National Parks, wildlife reserves and other types of protected areas where indigenous peoples have aboriginal claims, indigenous peoples are allowed to continue to occupy and use the resources of these areas but only so long as they use the natural resources sustainably. This use, agreed with the park authorities, should reconcile the needs of both the indigenous peoples and the conservationists. Experience has found that these needs can be reconciled and made compatible, although this is far from being routine. Clearly major deforestation or firearm hunting for commerce by indigenous peoples are not compatible with wildlands protection. Where indigenous people and park authorities do not agree, then either the park or the people are encouraged to move. (author)
JF - Policy, planning, and research working papers -- Environment (WPS 245)
PB - Latin America and the Caribbean Technical Dept., World Bank
CY - Washington, DC
UR - http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/29810664
N1 - See also: http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/500811468776777817/pdf/multi-page.pdf
ER -