Abstrakt: |
This paper discusses the ownership of traditional medicine knowledge by drawing empirical data on the experience of the indigenous communities in Mentawai, Indonesia, and Sabah, Malaysia. For a long time, the acquisition of traditional medicine knowledge and the treatment of patients has been deemed the result of cultural heritage handed down from generation to generation. However, the complexity of the knowledge acquisition process and the skill displayed by the healer or kerei prove that traditional medicine knowledge qualifies as intellectual property. An appropriate protection strategy is identified based on the traditional knowledge ownership map in indigenous communities. This study reveals that not every traditional medicine knowledge and practices are "common properties". Therefore, the study suggests that traditional medicine knowledge, like any other intellectual properties, must be protected through intellectual property rights not only to protect the cultural and economic rights of indigenous people but also to protect the environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |