Speaker:
Maui Solomon
Event:
Cultural Commodification, Indigenous Peoples & Self-Determination Public Symposium
Date:
May 02, 2013 This presentation draws on examples from New Zealand and the Pacific to describe an Indigenous framework for protecting traditional users and their traditional knowledge.
Maui Solomon is a Barrister and Indigenous Peoples Advocate with 22 years legal experience specializing in land and fishing claims, cultural and intellectual property, environmental law and Treaty/Indigenous Peoples Rights issues. Maui is also an IPinCH research team member. This talk was presented at the IPinCH Cultural Commodification, Indigenous Peoples & Self-Determination Public Symposium held on May 2, 2013 at the University of British Columbia.
Related Links
- Moriori Cultural Database (Community Initiative page)
- Moriori Cultural Database Project Report (PDF)
- Commodifications of Cultural Heritage (Research Theme)