Performing arts Introduction • b  e recognised as the primary guardians and interpreters of their cultures • authorise or refuse to authorise the commercial use of Indigenous cultural and intellectual property according to customary law • maintain the secrecy of Indigenous knowledge and other cultural practices • full and proper attribution • control the recording of cultural customs and expressions, as well as the particular language that may be intrinsic to cultural identity, knowledge, skill, and teaching of culture. For a full list of rights see Our culture: our future – report on Australian Indigenous cultural and intellectual property rights.7 Current protection of heritage Australia’s current legal framework provides limited recognition and protection of Indigenous heritage rights. Our culture: our future recommended significant changes to legislation, policy and procedures. The Australian Government has not yet responded formally to these recommendations. However, there are proposals to amend the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth) to recognise Indigenous communal moral rights. In the absence of laws that protect Indigenous cultural and intellectual property, much of the rights’ recognition has been done at an industry and practitioner level, through the development of protocols and use of contracts to support the cultural rights of Indigenous people. Across the world, Indigenous people continue to call for rights at a national and international level. Indigenous people are developing statements and declarations, which assert their ownership and associated rights to Indigenous 08 cultural heritage. These statements and declarations are a means of giving the world notice of the rights of Indigenous people. They also set standards and develop an Indigenous discourse that will ensure that Indigenous people’s cultural heritage is respected and protected over time. These rights are given international recognition in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Article 31 states: 1. Indigenous peoples have the right to maintain, control, protect and develop their cultural heritage, traditional knowledge and traditional cultural expressions, as well as the manifestations of their sciences, technologies and cultures, including human and genetic resources, seeds, medicines, knowledge of the properties of fauna and flora, oral traditions, literatures, designs, sports and traditional games and visual and performing arts. They also have the right to maintain, control, protect and develop their intellectual property over such cultural heritage, traditional knowledge, and traditional cultural expressions. 2. In conjunction with Indigenous peoples, States shall take effective measures to recognise and protect the exercise of these rights.8 The Mataatua Declaration on Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property Rights urges Indigenous people to ‘develop a code of ethics which external users must observe when recording (visual, audio, written) their traditional and customary knowledge’.9 Draft Principles and Guidelines for the Protection of the Heritage of Indigenous People (1993), adopted by the former Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission’s Indigenous Reference Group in 1997,10 state: ‘Artists, writers and performers should refrain from incorporating elements derived from Indigenous heritage into their works without the informed consent of the Indigenous owners’. Performing arts Introduction In January 2002, the World Intellectual Property Organisation’s International Forum, Intellectual Property and Traditional Knowledge: Our Identity, Our Future, held in Muscat, Oman, adopted a declaration recognising that ‘traditional knowledge plays a vital role in building bridges between civilisations and cultures, in creating wealth and in promoting the human dignity and cultural identity of traditional communities’.11 Internationally, the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) has established an intergovernmental committee (IGC) on intellectual property and genetic resources, traditional knowledge and folklore to discuss intellectual property issues that arise in the context of: • access to genetic resources and benefit-sharing • protection of traditional knowledge, innovations and creativity • protection of expressions of folklore.12 Based on its extensive international, regional and national experience and on input from different countries, the WIPO IGC developed two important documents, which outline policy and legal options for traditional cultural expression and knowledge. These are: (i) the protection of traditional cultural expressions/expressions of folklore; draft objectives and principles13 (ii) the protection of traditional knowledge; draft objectives and principles.14 The latest WIPO provisions for the protection of traditional cultural expressions (TCEs) suggest three layers of protection tailored to different forms of cultural expression. It says TCEs of particular religious and cultural significance should be noted in a public register so there is certainty as to which are protected and for whose benefit. The items in the register would be afforded a form of protection similar to that given by intellectual property rights legislation. 09 It recommends in Article 3, that when TCEs have been registered or notified, there shall be adequate and effective legal and practical measures to ensure that the relevant community can prevent certain acts taking place without its free, prior and informed consent. With TCEs other than words, signs and names, these acts include: • the reproduction, publication, adaptation and communication to the public and adaptation of its traditional cultural expressions • any use of traditional cultural expression which does not acknowledge in an appropriate way the community as the source • any distortions, mutilations or other modification of or inappropriate action in relation to the traditional cultural expression • the acquisition or exercise of intellectual property rights over the traditional cultural expression adaptations of them.15 Regionally, a model law for protecting traditional knowledge in the Pacific was drafted and completed in July 2002. The Pacific Regional Framework for the Protection of Traditional Knowledge and Expression of Culture establishes ‘traditional cultural rights’ for traditional owners of traditional knowledge and expression of culture.16 The prior and informed consent of the traditional owners is required to: • reproduce or publish the traditional knowledge or expressions of culture • perform or display the traditional knowledge or expressions of culture in public • make available online or electronically transmit to the public (whether over a path or a combination of paths, or both) traditional knowledge or expression of culture • use the traditional knowledge or expression of culture in any other form.

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