l Abstracts 17 NTA did not establish a true right to veto, which would have given traditional land holders the power to decide whether or not to participate in the resource economy on a case-by-case basis. It therefore mainly provided a way of bringing traditional indigenous land rights within Australia’s resource economy in an orderly way. Empowerment and strengthening of customary rules and responsibilities were limited by the predefined processes provided for under the Act. The lack of sufficient resources and expert advice also limited indigenous peoples’ ability to use the rights under the Act to their advantage. 6. Changing the system from within: participatory plant breeding and ABS in China Jingsong Li, Janice Jiggins and Yiching Song China’s first participatory plant breeding (PPB) programme was initiated in Guangxi, southwest China. It aims to address declining genetic diversity in farmers’ fields and to improve livelihoods. As well as developing improved crop varieties for farmers, the programme is facilitating the negotiation of local agreements by which farming communities can benefit from sharing their genetic resources and related traditional knowledge with breeding institutes. This work has strengthened the legitimacy of farmers’ rights to benefitsharing, and is feeding into on-going policy discussions on how to implement the ABS provisions of the Convention on Biodiversity and the Nagoya Protocol. In a context where farmers face significant legal barriers to securing their rights and benefits, this experience shows how a locallevel experimental project, involving formal breeding institutes, can start to change attitudes, practices and policy debates, paving the way for changes in policy and law. 7. Decolonising action-research: the Potato Park biocultural protocol for benefit-sharing Alejandro Argumedo For decades, indigenous peoples have been calling for a holistic and more sensitive approach to their culture – one that values and nurtures their traditional knowledge systems and biocultural diversity. This article describes an innovative participatory action-research approach with five Quechua communities in Peru, where the communities worked with researchers to develop the Andean Potato Park’s biocultural protocol for equitable benefit-sharing. The BCP includes not only benefits derived from access to genetic resources and traditional knowledge, but also all benefits that come from activities related to the direct and indirect use of biocultural resources. The process of participating in the development of a research methodology and focus became not only a process of empowerment for the communities and their institutions, but also enabled them to participate in decision-making, particularly in defining the content of the BCP. As well as discussing this participatory process, the article briefly outlines the provisions of the BCP, and reflects on how the methodology could be improved in the future. 8. The Bushbuckridge BCP: traditional healers organise for ABS in South Africa Rodney Sibuye, Marie-Tinka Uys, Gino Cocchiaro and Johan Lorenzen With a history of uncompensated bioprospecting, the Kukula traditional health practitioners of Bushbuckridge, South Africa are faced with both marginalisation and an emerging ecological crisis from the overharvesting of medicinal plants. But they have staked their claim to rights through the development of a biocultural community protocol (BCP), to secure access to medicinal plants for healthcare, prevent overharvesting and gain benefits from commercial use. The BCP shows

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