This is the "Introduction" page of the "Intellectual Property Rights of Indigenous People" guide.
Alternate Page for Screenreader Users
Skip to Page Navigation
Skip to Page Content

Intellectual Property Rights of Indigenous People  

This guide was prepared in satisfaction of the requirements of the Foreign, Comparative and International Law Advanced Legal Research Course 2012. This guide will provide the user with links and research relating to the IP rights of indigenous peoples.
Last Updated: May 21, 2012 URL: http://law.okcu.libguides.com/content.php?pid=318609 Print Guide RSS UpdatesShareThis

Introduction Print Page
  Search: 
 
 

Welcome

IP News

 

Welcome!

Welcome all! This guide was intended to help my fellow students navigate their way through the world of intellectual property protections for indigenous people. Finding protection for indigenous people around the world has been difficult to do within the framework of intellectual property law. The difficulty comes from the relevant tools, such as copyright, patent, and trademark, that are currently available for the protection of these rights.

With this difficulty, however comes innovated thought, that is slowly leading to innovative soultions. This guide is an attempt to highlight that innovation in IP rights. This guide starts with resources in the Gold Star Library that discuss this issue, followed by a broad overview of International IP laws, to inlclude links to the relevant treaties. Then, the guide will link the researcher to the countries I've chosen to talk about. First, Africa, then the United States, and finally, Australia and New Zealand. Each part of the world is handling this problem differently, but I belive these parts of the world encompass most, if not all, the modern trends towards indigenous IP rights.

For African Nations, the soultion seems to be implementing IP protections within the framework of existing international treaties and this guide will provide links to those organizations that have been created to push IP rights by using those treaties.  For the United States, protection comes in the form specialized statutes like NAGPRA, and for Australia/New Zealand, IP protections are slowly coming from changes to existing IP protections from within. Enjoy!


 

World Intellectual Property Organization's Involvement With Traditional Knowledge of Indigenous Peoples

Subject Guide

Profile Image
Andrew Knife Chief
 

Contact Information

Andrew Knife Chief
Research Assistant
aknifechief.stu@my.okcu.edu

Jennifer Prilliman
Reference and Student Services Librarian
jsprilliman@okcu.edu
405-208-5174

Katie Brown
Assistant Director for Public & Faculty Services
ksbrown@okcu.edu
405-208-5062

Description

Loading  Loading...

Tip