PART III / CHAPTER 7 BIO-CULTURAL JURISPRUDENCE Locke also remains one of the exemplar philosophers of societies is an example of customary law where a gift is an the 17th and 18th century, a period in which many of our ideas affirmation of a relationship that obliges reciprocation, of selfhood emerges. In many ways, the question of personal the gift therefore can never become a commodity in the strict identity was the primary question that motivated Locke’s sense of the word since it is always tied to the giver through enquiry…While the question of personal identity troubled the obligations it creates in the receiver. many philosophers even before Locke, it was only with the publication of Locke’s Two Treatises on Government and Mauss by observing the culture of gifts amongst the Essay Concerning Human Understanding that you have Maori and in Polynesia established the very opposite of the establishment of the most coherent argument linking commodification that ‘the bond created between things theories of identity to property. If property is both an is in fact a bond between persons, since the thing itself is extension and a pre requisite of personality then we should be a person or pertains to a person’. Hence it follows that to aware of the possibility that different modes of property may give something is to give a part of oneself. In this system be seen as generally encouraging different modes of ideas one gives away what is in reality a part of one’s 4 of personality. nature and substance, while to receive something is to receive 5 a part of someone’s spiritual essence. Social, cultural and Mauss in his work when analyzing the giving of gifts in spiritual bonds that underlie gifts in traditional societies also traditional societies was emphasizing their inalienability underlie relationships bio-cultural communities have with from the giver. The gift can therefore never become a their knowledge, lands, territories and resources, which are commodity that is separate from the person who gives it, but the heart of their conservation and sustainable use practices. rather the very act of giving creates a social bond with an Therefore the right to FPIC in the context of Article 8(j) for it obligation to reciprocate on the part of the recipient. to truly affirm the way of life of bio-cultural communities While property jurisprudence that underlies FPIC in contract has to underpin the right to consent in accordance with law emphasizes the rights of the legal subject to alienate an the customary laws and values of these communities 6 object that s/he owns, the nature of the gift in traditional 3. Towards a Biocultural Jurisprudence The trade route is the Songline’ said Flynn, ‘Because songs, not that attempt to secure the interests of ILCs. Estrangement in things are the principle medium of exchange. Trading in “things” environmental law and policy is generally manifested in is the secondary consequence of trading in song’. Before the paternalistic attempts at protecting the rights of ILCs, without whites came, he went on, no one in Australia was landless, addressing the root of the matter, which is securing the since everyone inherited as his or her private property a stretch foundations that support a way of life i.e. self-determination of the Ancestor’s song and the stretch of country over which and customary law. the song passed. A man’s verses were his title deeds to territory. He could lend them to others. He could borrow other verses in It is possible that causes of legal estrangement are cognitive, return. The one thing he couldn’t do was sell of get rid of them. due to certain habits of legal thinking that determine what is Bruce Chatwin, The Songlines observed and what is ignored when property jurisprudence encounters ILCs. An effective counter to property jurisprudence Property jurisprudence when dealing with ILCs is estranged. is a bio-cultural jurisprudence that takes as its starting point This estrangement taints even the best-intentioned efforts the right of bio-cultural communities to determine their way of the different international environmental laws and polices of life in accordance with their customary and spiritual values. 4. 5. 6. Lawrence Liang et al. ‘How Does an Asian Commons Mean?’ . See also Etienne Balibar, My self and My own: One and the Same? In Bill Maurer & Gabriele Schwab, Accelerating Possession: Global Futures of Property and Personhood, New York: Columbia University Press, 2006. Mauss, Marcel, The Gift: Forms and Functions of Exchange in Archaic Societies, Norton Library: New York, 1967, p.10. Hyde, Lewis, The Gift: Imagination and the Erotic Life of Property, Random House: New York, 1983. 71

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