@article{Rourke:299136,
      recid = {299136},
      author = {Rourke, Michelle and Halabi, Sam and Burci, Gian Luca and  Katzt, Rebecca},
      title = {The Nagoya Protocol and the legal structure of global  biogenomic research},
      address = {2020},
      number = {ARTICLE},
      abstract = {International research collaborations have been the  engines of some of the most important advances in human  health and nutrition over the last century. The Green  Revolution, built on networks of scientists and resources  drawn from the world's wealthiest and poorest countries,  averted critical food shortages that faced the growing  world population in the 1950s and 1960s. The most promising  vaccine candidates for devastating infectious diseases like  Ebola and HIV have resulted from partnerships of financial  resources, governments, and scientists from the Democratic  Republic of Congo, Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, South  Africa, and Thailand. Orchestrated technology transfer and  research capacity building in low- and middle-income  countries have delivered advances in the ability of  low-resource countries to manufacture medicines and  vaccines. Scientists have worked together across borders as  threats posed by infectious disease, malnutrition, and  environmental degradation necessitate partnerships that  match the technology and resources in wealthy countries  with the knowledge and biodiversity abundant in many poorer  ones.},
      url = {http://repository.graduateinstitute.ch/record/299136},
}