Background: Just as developing states are blessed with natural resources capable of transforming their economies in a positive direction, the imposed World Trade Organisation’s (WTO) mores continue to relegate them to the status of underdevelopment. The consequences of this on investment, trade, and finance in the Third World States (TWSs), especially Africa, are disarticulation of the economy, exploitation, disinvestment, unemployment, political instability, and unavailability of relevant technology to move TWSs forward, among others. This gives rise to the politics behind Rooibos (Aspalathus linearis) patenting (a medicinal plant found only in South Africa) by various multinational corporations (MNCs).
Materials and methods: This study adopted a political economy approach with emphasis on both primary and secondary sources of data collection using content analysis.
Result: There is a need to adhere strictly to the issues of intellectual property rights (IPRs), geographical indications (GIs), prior informed consent (PIC), and access and sharing benefits (ASB). These have not been observed by the western states because of their economy of neo-imperialism to the disadvantage of developing states.
Conclusion: This paper recommends that there is a aneed for a regional regime such as African Regional Intellectual Property Organisation (ARIPO), on indigenous knowledge (IK) to patent the continental biodiversity resources.
The plights of African resources patenting through the lenses of the world trade organization: An assessment of south Africa’s Rooibos tea’s labyrinth journey
Year: 2014