Abstract

The implementation of access and benefit-sharing (ABS) protocols, and especially the Nagoya Protocol, has created new hurdles for international collaborations around Indigenous Traditional Knowledge. Overall, these frameworks push for the development of novel collaborative North–South agendas to improve the fair distribution of benefits. The Green Health Project (Guatemala) aims to implement a culturally pertinent and mutually accepted framework for sustainable use, as well as ABS of traditional medicinal plants. It involves developing a consensus among Indigenous groups, government officials, industry, and academia. We describe steps undertaken to design and implement an intercultural transdisciplinary process that promotes trust building and advances herbal medicine research in a respectful and innovative way. This involves joint definition of goals and methods. The consortium co-researched Q’eqchi’ Maya traditional medicine, collected voucher specimens of medicinal plants with traditional Healers, identified their taxa, and later developed a literature-based evaluation identifying species for potential product development. No samples for further research and development were collected. By applying the emic–etic concept, the project helped improve understanding of the main drivers of each stakeholder and the associated obstacles for reaching an ABS agreement. The project also explored the emergence of potential new drivers for developing evidence-based herbal medicine from the perspectives of academia, policy, cooperation, and grassroots Indigenous movements.

Highlights

  • Recent years have seen a tremendous increase in research on certain traditional medical systems, albeit the drivers have been different in each region studied

  • The medical classification of “Traditional Chinese Medicine” is included in the latest edition (11) of the International Classification of Diseases as a supplementary chapter on traditional medicine conditions and “Ancient Chinese Medicine”. Another driver for herbal medicine research is based on the framework of bioeconomy or biotechnology, whereby local medical resources are seen as means to drive both national or regional bioeconomies with a vision to support biotechnological capabilities on a sustainable basis, often resulting in strategies to overcome some of the challenges of environmental degradation (Valli et al 2018)

  • The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), and the Nagoya Protocol (NP) in particular, have generated yet another driver towards researching Traditional Knowledge on herbal medicine, pushing for the development of collaborative North–South agendas aimed at a fair distribution of benefits

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Summary

Introduction

Recent years have seen a tremendous increase in research on certain traditional medical systems, albeit the drivers have been different in each region studied. The medical classification of “Traditional Chinese Medicine” is included in the latest edition (11) of the International Classification of Diseases (https://icd.who.int/en) as a supplementary chapter on traditional medicine conditions and “Ancient Chinese Medicine” Another driver for herbal medicine research is based on the framework of bioeconomy or biotechnology, whereby local medical resources are seen as means to drive both national or regional bioeconomies with a vision to support biotechnological capabilities on a sustainable basis, often resulting in strategies to overcome some of the challenges of environmental degradation (Valli et al 2018). In American countries with strong Indigenous representation, an important drive to advance herbal medicine research, more recently, is linked to emancipatory processes of Indigenous peoples and towards developing more sustainable and culturally pertinent models for healthcare delivery under the concept of “health sovereignty”. Political instability and widespread corruption create a generalized sense of mistrust towards authorities, even towards those in place to promote and drive conservation

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