Credit: Johan Lorenzen l The Bushbuckridge BCP: traditional health practitioners organise for ABS in South Africa 103 Medicinal plant nursery maintained by Kukula members. in the east and 300 per square kilometre in the wetter west, the population density is already one of the highest in southern Africa, and the population growth rate is 2.4%. Unemployment in the Bushbuckridge area is estimated at 63%. There is a heavy reliance on the cash economy and on State grants, mainly in the form of pensions and child grants. Approximately 50% of the adult male population and 14% of women engage in migrant labour. The average household income is R850 (about US$110) per month. The area is extremely biodiverse. It is also culturally and linguistically one of the most diverse in South Africa, with people from different ethnic backgrounds and language groups. For example, people living in the same geographical areas speak Pedi, Pulana (which is a mixture of Pedi, Swazi and Tsonga), Tsonga and Swazi. Many also speak English, Afrikaans or Portuguese, given the close proximity to the Mozambican border (Thornton, 2002). Traditional health practitioners tend to their communities’ physical, cultural and spiritual well-being through traditional medicine and cultural ceremonies. The healers also hold various forms of traditional knowledge in relation to the uses of their local medicinal plants. Through their traditional practices of sustainable harvesting, the healers support the conservation and sustainable use of these plants. Unfortunately, commercial-level harvesting of medicinal plants for use in South Africa’s cities threatens many of these plant species. Access in government-managed protected areas has been severely restricted due to this overharvesting and local traditional healers struggle to harvest the plants they need. The healers also have concerns about the use of their traditional knowledge (TK) without their prior informed consent based on a long history of bio-prospecting with no benefits to the community. Methods and processes In 2009, Natural Justice was invited by the K2C management committee and its partners to present and discuss community-based approaches to access and benefit-sharing (ABS) mechanisms, including biocultural community protocols

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