Benefits of Maize Variety Protection in Kenya
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Date
2015Author
Shikoli, Aprinah M
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Several African countries and regional organizations are investing in the establishment of a plant
variety protection system modeled on the UPOV 1991 Convention, which currently provides the
strongest, international standard for plant variety protection. Whereas proponents argue that
strong protection of breeder’s rights will incentivize breeding and the introduction of new
varieties for farmers, opponents fear that the proposed legal framework is unsuitable for African
countries as it may hamper traditional farming practices of using and exchanging farm-saved
seed. The challenge for African countries is to strike a balance between protecting the interests of
breeders through the incentive function of plant breeder’s rights for the commercial market, and
the leeway that needs to be provided to smallholder farmers that depend on informal sources for
their seed security and survival. The intellectual property system for the protection of plant
varieties designed by developing and least developed countries (LDCs) should strike the
necessary balance between the interests of plant breeders and society so that the right to food can
be better realized. One of the major international instruments whose implementation can have
implications on the realization of the right to food in these countries is the Agreement on Trade
Related Intellectual Property Rights (the TRIPS Agreement). Kenya has enacted the Plant
Breeders’ Rights for the protection of plant varieties. Accordingly, the purpose of this paper is to
examine and explore varies ways in which maize variety in Kenya can be protected to enhance
food security and economic advancement.
Publisher
University of Nairobi