3. Biocultural Systems In developing the Potato Park as a practical framework, one of the first outcomes from the research carried out by ANDES, IIED, and the Potato Park was the definition of the concept of Biocultural Systems. This is based on traditional concepts of conservation and sustainable use and has provided the foundations for the Park’s policies in most areas, but particularly access to biodiversity and genetic resources, and associated traditional knowledge, as well as fair and equitable benefit sharing. The Biocultural Systems concept has been particularly valuable in relation to the elaboration of principles for benefit sharing because of the way it has highlighted that internal mechanisms within the Park are as important as the framework for engagement with external actors. ‘Biocultural System’ is a term that describes an indivisible system containing the knowledge, innovations, and practices of Indigenous and local communities, as they are collectively maintained. It incorporates the traditional territory itself, including natural resources and the diversity of genes, variety of crops, species, and ecosystems, and the cultural and spiritual values and laws developed within the socio-ecological context of the communities. These elements are customary parts of knowledge systems and are, in general, linked to cosmological beliefs as part of the Indigenous ‘cosmovision,’ or holistic view of the world. The strong links between human society and the environment, which form part of the lived experience of the communities of the Potato Park (and other Indigenous Peoples) suggest that biological and cultural resources are interdependent manifestations of the diversity of life on Earth. The natural environment is considered an essential part of human society just as many biological resources – such as diverse crops and healthy ecosystems – depend on time-honoured practices of breeding and stewardship. Therefore, the concept of Biocultural Systems broadly reflects the Ayllu system and the aspiration for Sumaq Causay mentioned earlier. In terms of biodiversity management, the concept of ‘Biocultural Systems’ immediately leads to the point that resources, territories, culture, and traditional knowledge cannot be treated as separate objects that may be permanently alienated, but must be considered as a biocultural whole to which limited rights of access may be granted. Academically, there are parallels between this latter point and with the concept of transdisciplinarity. This is in the sense that both transdisciplinarity as a concept and (many) indigenous cosmovisions are incommensurable with the (artificial) separation of knowledge-about-the-world into bounded, and doctrinal disciplines such as ‘economics’, ‘law’ or ‘biology’. Consequently, the maintenance of functioning Biocultural Systems requires a recognition of several key points: 1) The elements of a biocultural system must be treated as a whole. For example, a landscape provides physical space for biodiversity and knowledge development, while knowledge about a plant resource and the resource itself have a symbiotic relationship where the removal of one will lead to the destruction of the other. 2) Traditional knowledge and customary laws are intimately linked with their location and subjects. 3) Cultural and spiritual values shape the processes through which Indigenous Peoples, and probably all peoples, acquire, use, and transmit knowledge, thereby ensuring continuity. 4) Resources and knowledge are fundamentally linked to communities and, while they may be made use of, they cannot be permanently removed without damaging the community. 3.1 T he challenges to biocultural systems and the development of biocultural protocols The holistic concept has been central in the Indigenous biodiversity agenda where identity is fundamental in their relationships with states. Existing constitutional and legal frameworks have begun to recognize the rights of indigenous peoples to ancestral territoriality, despite the context of persecution and forced displacement. Indigenous peoples underline that the recognition of prior informed consent and equity within an alien conceptual framework is not enough: they also demand their right to difference, that is, recognition of special rights for Mother Earth, including biological and genetic resources. Community Biocultural Protocols 5

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