Conclusions B for livestock keepers are a way of making visible community-based management of animal genetic resources and highlighting the association between breeds and communities. They are a tool for empowering livestock keepers and of upgrading their knowledge and heritage. IOCULTURAL COMMUNITY PROTOCOLS The biocultural community protocol concept has emerged from the discussion around access and benefit-sharing in other fields of natural resources. Their rationale is to ensure that communities are aware and prepared when they enter into access and benefit-sharing negotiations and agreements. However, with respect to livestock keepers, the real value of biocultural community protocols would be as a tool for reaffirming Article 8j of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity which commits signatory governments to the Convention to respect, preserve indigenous and local communities and to support in-situ conservation. The entitlement for in-situ conservation implicitly entails access to land and grazing areas which is of much larger importance and significance for local livestockkeeping communities than possible access and benefit-sharing agreements in which they would provide access to genes, etc. So far, Article 8j has hardly been invoked by livestockkeeping communities and their supporters, so a concerted effort to establish a critical mass of biocultural community protocols by livestock-keeping communities could serve to do so and remind governments and other concerned authorities of their commitments under the UN Convention on Biological Diversity. Biocultural protocols correspond to a number of the Strategic Priorities for Action in the Global Plan of Action for Animal Genetic Resources, including numbers 2, 5, 6, 8, 14 and 20 (see Appendix, page 31) which specifically mention community involvement in a range of activities aimed at the conservation and sustainable management of animal genetic resources. FAO’s guidelines for developing national strategies and action plans also request effective participation by local and indigenous communities (FAO, 2009b). Besides being of potential legal significance under provisions of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, biocultural community protocols have an empowering effect on communities: the process makes them aware of their rights and nudges them to reflect on their current situation and their future aspirations. This tool has met with great response and interest among both communities and support organizations. 27

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