Language revitalization in Native North America - Issues of intellectual property rights and intellectual sovereignty. Tatsch, S. College of Anthropology, 1:257–62, 2004.
Language revitalization in Native North America - Issues of intellectual property rights and intellectual sovereignty [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
Language revitalization, oral tradition and epistemology are expressions of Native peoples intellectual sovereignty, and thus the foundation for indigenous intellectual property rights. As the people of California move towards language and cultural revitalization the question arises: What constitutes or constructs the definitions of intellectual property and how can appropriation of indigenous knowledge be protected? Looking at the issues faced by the California's indigenous populace and by implication, other indigenous peoples in the United States, this essay examines how protection may be afforded under the United Nations definition of 'heritage'. Given that the holding safe of a 'culture' or 'heritage' is inclusive of language, and thus has been determined to be a human right.
@article{tatsch_language_2004,
	title = {Language revitalization in {Native} {North} {America} - {Issues} of intellectual property rights and intellectual sovereignty},
	volume = {1},
	issn = {0350-6134},
	url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15156749},
	abstract = {Language revitalization, oral tradition and epistemology are expressions of Native peoples intellectual sovereignty, and thus the foundation for indigenous intellectual property rights. As the people of California move towards language and cultural revitalization the question arises: What constitutes or constructs the definitions of intellectual property and how can appropriation of indigenous knowledge be protected? Looking at the issues faced by the California's indigenous populace and by implication, other indigenous peoples in the United States, this essay examines how protection may be afforded under the United Nations definition of 'heritage'. Given that the holding safe of a 'culture' or 'heritage' is inclusive of language, and thus has been determined to be a human right.},
	journal = {College of Anthropology},
	author = {Tatsch, Sheri},
	year = {2004},
	pmid = {15156749},
	keywords = {California, Human Rights, Human Rights: legislation \& jurisprudence, Humans, Indians, Intellectual Property, Language, North American, Ownership, Ownership: legislation \& jurisprudence, United Nations, United States},
	pages = {257--62},
}

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