000299136 001__ 299136
000299136 005__ 20250213113417.0
000299136 037__ $$aARTICLE
000299136 245__ $$aThe Nagoya Protocol and the legal structure of global biogenomic research
000299136 269__ $$a2020
000299136 336__ $$aJournal Articles
000299136 520__ $$aInternational research collaborations have been the engines of some of the most important advances in human health and nutrition over the last century. The Green Revolution, built on networks of scientists and resources drawn from the world's wealthiest and poorest countries, averted critical food shortages that faced the growing world population in the 1950s and 1960s. The most promising vaccine candidates for devastating infectious diseases like Ebola and HIV have resulted from partnerships of financial resources, governments, and scientists from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, South Africa, and Thailand. Orchestrated technology transfer and research capacity building in low- and middle-income countries have delivered advances in the ability of low-resource countries to manufacture medicines and vaccines. Scientists have worked together across borders as threats posed by infectious disease, malnutrition, and environmental degradation necessitate partnerships that match the technology and resources in wealthy countries with the knowledge and biodiversity abundant in many poorer ones.
000299136 580__ $$aIn: The Yale Journal of International Law. - Volume 45(2020), Issue 1, pages 133-190 
000299136 700__ $$aRourke, Michelle
000299136 700__ $$aHalabi, Sam
000299136 700__ $$aBurci, Gian Luca
000299136 700__ $$aKatzt, Rebecca
000299136 8564_ $$92c232a03-bbe4-4a66-b05d-d86aa94d0b9a$$s1344750$$uhttps://repository.graduateinstitute.ch/record/299136/files/The_Nagoya_Protocol_and_the_Legal_Structure_small.pdf
000299136 901__ $$uInternational Law Department$$0319287
000299136 901__ $$uGlobal Health Centre
000299136 909CO $$ooai:repository.graduateinstitute.ch:299136$$pGLOBAL_SET$$pIHEID:Explore
000299136 981__ $$aoverwrite