Graham Dutfield

University of Leeds

The Beyond-Intellectual-Property Moment in Context

In 1996, Darrell Posey and I published Beyond Intellectual Property: Towards Traditional Resource Rights for Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities. We must have given the impression from the title that the book was about patents, copyright, trademarks, and other legal rights in creative productions as they affected Indigenous peoples. It was about these things. But there was much more to the book. It offered a broad “bundles of rights” framework to comprehend and advance Indigenous peoples’ rights in knowledge, resources and territory. In addition to our lack of schooling in the discipline of law, the book had another unique feature diverging from mainstream legal publications: rather than legal scholars or practising lawyers, its primary target readership was Indigenous peoples. We intended it as explicatory and practical, and we conspicuously avoided paternalism.

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Special Focus: Histories of Ethnoscience

HAR editors are pleased to bring you this Special Focus Section, guest edited by Raphael Uchôa, Staffan Müller-Wille and Harriet Mercer. The pieces in this collection will be published on a rolling basis, and the table of contents will be updated accordingly.

In the middle of the twentieth century, a flurry of scientific sub-disciplines emerged. These went by the name of ethno-sciences and they came in numerous varieties from ethno-medicine to ethno-botany, -zoology, -biology, -medicine, -pharmacology, -astronomy, -psychology, -cartography, and more. The creation of these sub-disciplines was not, however, a strictly twentieth-century phenomenon. The development of “ethno-science” as an epistemic category that, in one way or another, involves other knowledges than science has a much longer and uneven history. This Special Focus Section aims to provide a critical historical account of the emergence of the “ethno-sciences,” largely focusing on the plant sciences as a paradigmatic example. In particular, it focuses on the ruptures and continuities that occurred from the late eighteenth through to the twentieth centuries, when Western scientists’ attitudes to the category of “Indigenous knowledge” were subject to change across space and time.

Table of Contents

March 2024

Science and Its Others: Histories of Ethnoscience

Raphael Uchôa, Staffan Müller-Wille and Harriet Mercer

Between the Ethnographic Record and the Field Diary: The Hybrid Medical Practices in Zinacantán before Ethnomedicine (Mexico, 1940s)

Paula López Caballero

April 2024

Sources for the History of Ethnosciences: James Mooney and the Sacred Formulas of the Cherokees

Raphael Uchôa and Silvia Waisse

May 2024

Plant Identification and Ethnoscience in the Work of Rumphius

Roy Ellen

August 2024

“Women in Traditional Agricultural Knowledge”: Mexican Ethnobotany in the 1970s

Diana Sclavo

The Absence of Brazilian Medicinal Plants in Portuguese Writings

Marcia H. M. Ferraz and Ana Maria Alfonso-Goldfarb

October 2024

The Beyond-Intellectual-Property Moment in Context

Graham Dutfield

November 2024

Globalizing plant knowledge beyond bioprospecting?

Sabina Leonelli

December 2024

“México es un país megadiverso”: Biocultural Heritage and Exceptionality in Mexican Ethnobiology

Abigail Nieves Delgado