Negotiation of new international health law on intellectual property, technology transfer, open science and pathogen access and benefit sharing: a textual and contextual analysis

Introduction This original research article reframes new international law and policy developments at the intersections of open science, technology transfer, intellectual property and access and sharing the benefits of biomedical innovation in the context of global pandemics.Methods Through textual...

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Main Authors: Jeremy de Beer, Rosa De Koker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2024-12-01
Series:BMJ Public Health
Online Access:https://bmjpublichealth.bmj.com/content/2/2/e001467.full
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author Jeremy de Beer
Rosa De Koker
author_facet Jeremy de Beer
Rosa De Koker
author_sort Jeremy de Beer
collection DOAJ
description Introduction This original research article reframes new international law and policy developments at the intersections of open science, technology transfer, intellectual property and access and sharing the benefits of biomedical innovation in the context of global pandemics.Methods Through textual and contextual analysis, using the lens of national experiences and negotiating positions of one high-income country, Canada, it traces the evolution of legal normative developments from a proposed waiver of aspects of the World Trade Organisation Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights through a forum shift to negotiate a new agreement for pandemic preparedness and response (the Pandemic Agreement) at the WHO.Results The analysis shows a significant evolution of treaty provisions on R&D, sustainable and diversified production of pandemic-related products, transfer of technology and know-how and access and benefit sharing. Juxtaposed against a Canadian parliamentary report, stakeholder consultations and Canada’s stated commitment to equity, the negotiating texts reflect major compromises on the key issues. High-income countries sought open access to pathogen gene sequence data crucial for pandemic prevention, preparedness and response while resisting measures other than voluntarily licensing on mutually agreed terms of private intellectual property rights derived from the use of such data or other publicly funded research. Low- and middle-income countries, meanwhile, were offered diluted language on technology transfer in exchange for a new pathogen access and benefit-sharing scheme.Conclusions The practical effects of these compromises remain to be seen, but they risk exacerbating rather than ameliorating global health inequities.
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spelling doaj-art-58e07bed81384819b91cdb6a513d45fc2025-08-20T02:49:12ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Public Health2753-42942024-12-012210.1136/bmjph-2024-001467Negotiation of new international health law on intellectual property, technology transfer, open science and pathogen access and benefit sharing: a textual and contextual analysisJeremy de Beer0Rosa De Koker1Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, CanadaStudent at the University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, CanadaIntroduction This original research article reframes new international law and policy developments at the intersections of open science, technology transfer, intellectual property and access and sharing the benefits of biomedical innovation in the context of global pandemics.Methods Through textual and contextual analysis, using the lens of national experiences and negotiating positions of one high-income country, Canada, it traces the evolution of legal normative developments from a proposed waiver of aspects of the World Trade Organisation Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights through a forum shift to negotiate a new agreement for pandemic preparedness and response (the Pandemic Agreement) at the WHO.Results The analysis shows a significant evolution of treaty provisions on R&D, sustainable and diversified production of pandemic-related products, transfer of technology and know-how and access and benefit sharing. Juxtaposed against a Canadian parliamentary report, stakeholder consultations and Canada’s stated commitment to equity, the negotiating texts reflect major compromises on the key issues. High-income countries sought open access to pathogen gene sequence data crucial for pandemic prevention, preparedness and response while resisting measures other than voluntarily licensing on mutually agreed terms of private intellectual property rights derived from the use of such data or other publicly funded research. Low- and middle-income countries, meanwhile, were offered diluted language on technology transfer in exchange for a new pathogen access and benefit-sharing scheme.Conclusions The practical effects of these compromises remain to be seen, but they risk exacerbating rather than ameliorating global health inequities.https://bmjpublichealth.bmj.com/content/2/2/e001467.full
spellingShingle Jeremy de Beer
Rosa De Koker
Negotiation of new international health law on intellectual property, technology transfer, open science and pathogen access and benefit sharing: a textual and contextual analysis
BMJ Public Health
title Negotiation of new international health law on intellectual property, technology transfer, open science and pathogen access and benefit sharing: a textual and contextual analysis
title_full Negotiation of new international health law on intellectual property, technology transfer, open science and pathogen access and benefit sharing: a textual and contextual analysis
title_fullStr Negotiation of new international health law on intellectual property, technology transfer, open science and pathogen access and benefit sharing: a textual and contextual analysis
title_full_unstemmed Negotiation of new international health law on intellectual property, technology transfer, open science and pathogen access and benefit sharing: a textual and contextual analysis
title_short Negotiation of new international health law on intellectual property, technology transfer, open science and pathogen access and benefit sharing: a textual and contextual analysis
title_sort negotiation of new international health law on intellectual property technology transfer open science and pathogen access and benefit sharing a textual and contextual analysis
url https://bmjpublichealth.bmj.com/content/2/2/e001467.full
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