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This book critically analyses the relationships between intangible cultural heritage (ICH), sustainable development and intellectual property rights (IPRs). The author argues that although the use of IPRs to safeguard ICH presents challenges and has impeded sustainable development in some cases, the adoption of these rights on ICH also presents opportunities and, fundamentally, is not contrary to the spirit of the UNESCO Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage (UNESCO 2003 Convention). The adoption of IPRs on ICH can form an important part of the development of sustainable safeguarding plans capable of benefitting the communities, groups and individuals (CGIs) that create, maintain and transmit such heritage. The book provides a nuanced analysis of the relationship between intellectual property (IP) law and ICH as well as examining the role of IPRs in safeguarding ICH through the lens of sustainable development. It analyses the relationship between IP law and ICH from environmental, social and economic perspectives. These perspectives allow a thorough evaluation of both the positive effects and potential pitfalls of adopting IPRs to safeguard ICH. The book addresses deeper structural matters that refer back to the safeguarding of social and environmental processes underlying ICH.
Analyses detailed examples of intellectual property rights safeguarding intangible cultural heritage Includes discussion of deeper structural matters that refer back to the sustainability of processes underlying ICH Provides a thorough review of the relationships between ICH, sustainable development and IPRs
Auteur
Benedetta Ubertazzi has been a UNESCO Facilitator on the global capacity building programme for the effective implementation of the 2003 Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage and a capacity builder with the International Academy on UNESCO Designations and Sustainable Development since 2018. She is a tenured Aggregate Professor of European Union Law at the University of Milan-Bicocca, a Jean Monnet Module coordinator (2022-2025), a lecturer for the WIPO-Turin Master of Laws in Intellectual Property and an expert in the WIPO Indigenous and Local Community Women Entrepreneurship Program. She has been a Von Humboldt Foundation Fellow (hosted by the Max Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition) since 2010 and she is a member of the International Law Association Committees for Participation in Global Cultural Heritage Governance (appointed by the chairs) and respectively Intellectual Property and Private International Law.
In 2018, she became a co-evaluator for UNESCO at the Regional Research Centre for Safeguarding Intangible Cultural Heritage in West and Central Asia (UNESCO Category 2 Centre) based in Tehran. She has served as a legal expert for the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation at multinational negotiations of the UNESCO Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage since 2010. She has been a co-facilitator of capacity-building for sustainable development plans for several communities around the world and she is a legal expert for many elements, including Traditional violin craftsmanship in Cremona (UNESCO Representative List 2012); and Falconry, a living human heritage (UNESCO Representative List 20216), among others. She is a member of the steering committees for the inscription of Tocatì, programme for the safeguarding of traditional games and sports and respectively Alpine Food Heritage: Knowledge, knowledge, skills, practices and values of alpine communities (both in the nomination phase for the UNESCO Register of Good Safeguarding Practices). Between 2018-2021, she was a member of the 'HIPAMS Heritage Sensitive Intellectual Property and Marketing Strategies: India' project, which was supported and facilitated by the British Library Sustainable Development Programme, Coventry University and communities in West Bengal, India.
Contenu
1: IntroductionThe introduction provides a sharp, concise introduction to the general aims andargument of the book, in addition to setting out the structure through which thebook will engage with these aims.2: Intangible Cultural HeritageChapter 2 focuses on the first major part of this book, namely ICH. It lays thegroundwork for some of the broader theoretical themes that run through the book,namely: defining the nature of ICH, principally through the domains of ICH setout in the UNESCO 2003 Convention; the notion of safeguarding ICH; the role ofcommunities, groups and individuals within the framework of the 2003 Conventionand finally the instruments, objects, artefacts and cultural spaces associated withICH.2.1 The Definition and Practice of Intangible Cultural Heritage2.2 Safeguarding2.3 The Subjective Component of Intangible Cultural Heritage: Communities,Groups and Individuals2.4 The Objective and Spatial Components of Intangible Cultural Heritage:Instruments, Objects, Artefacts and Cultural Spaces3: Sustainable Development and Intangible Cultural HeritageChapter 3 focuses on the second major part of this book, namely sustainabledevelopment. Specifically, sustainable development can be of an economic, socialand environmental character, inclusive of human rights, facilitative of mutualrespect among communities and intended to better safeguard ICH. The Chapterexamines how culture and ICH in particular are linked to sustainable developmentas illustrated in the 2003 UNESCO Convention, its Operational Directives and itsOverall Results Framework. The Chapter analyses the role of ICH as a strategicresource to enable inclusive sustainable development and therefore participationand inclusive governance. The chapter also introduces ICH as a relevant tool toenable environmentally sustainable development, as well as inclusive economicdevelopment. In addressing inclusive economic development, chapter 3 laysthe foundation for subsequent chapters to explore the relationship between ICHand IPRs, intended as a mechanism to foster valorization and promotion of ICH,towards its viability and vitality for the benefit of the communities concerned. Peaceand security, as a requirement that is essential for sustainable development, anda key component of UNESCO's mission, is also addressed in the chapter. Finally,chapter 3 concludes with analysis of the Covid-19 pandemic as a case study on therelationship between ICH and sustainable development, exhibiting the importanceof community-based resilience, with indigenous and local communities at theforefront of this process.3.1 The Definition and Practice of Sustainable Development in the context ofIntangible Cultural Heritage3.2 Inclusive Social Development: Participation and Inclusive Governance3.3 Environmental sustainability3.4 Inclusive Economic Development and Commercialisation3.5 Peace and Security3.6 Covid-19: A case study4: Intellectual Property Rights and Intangible Cultural HeritageChapter 4 focuses on the third major part of this book, namely IPRs. It providesanalysis of different IPRs, including sui generis IPRs, and the strengths andweaknesses of such rights as mechanisms capable of safeguarding ICH. Thechapter argues that while IPRs can be insufficient to protect ICH, and can evenreinforce misappropriation of such heritage, there are circumstances in whichIPRs are valuable not only in their capacity to empower indigenous and localcommunities themselves, but also in their capacity to work alongside othersafeguarding mechanisms that can offer different protections.4.1 Intangible Cultural Heritage, Intellectual Property Rights and TerritorialEnforcement4.2 Copyright and Neighbouring Rights4.3 Patents, Industrial Designs4.4 Know-how, Trade Secrets, Databases and Contracts4.5 Individual, Collective, Certification Trade Marks4.6 Geographical Indications, Protected Designation of Origin, TraditionalSpeciality Guaranteed4.7 The Li…
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