@article{41861,
      recid = {41861},
      author = {Ibarra Rojas, Lucero and Escobedo Osorio, Ezequiel and  Kejtsitani, Fogata},
      title = {What’s yours is mine and what’s mine is mine? Re-thinking  intellectual property and research ethics from the  experience of the Purhépecha community of Cherán},
      pages = {29 pages},
      note = {This resource was extracted from the Directory of Open  Access Journals (DOAJ)},
      abstract = {Intellectual property and cultural policy are essential to  the practice of cultural rights, however, in both legal  frameworks, indigenous peoples have often found that the  state has little consideration for their voices and their  world views. In contrast, though no more representative of  indigenous perspectives, the social sciences, while  engaging with  indigenous  voices,  have  often  treated   them  as  a  source  to  be  appropriated  with  disregard  of their rights and agency. Through an activist and  collaborative methodology that includes the concerns of a  wide group of indigenous and non-indigenous persons, this   article  explores  how  the  oral  history  project  of   the  Fogata  Kejtsitani  in  the  Purhépecha   community    of   Cherán,   Mexico,   contributes   to   discussions    on   the   appropriation   and   dissemination   of    culture.   This   community   has   managed   the    recognition  of  their  right  to  autonomy,  and  in  so   doing,  has  founded  a  continuous  process of law  creation, on which Kejtsitani takes part.},
      url = {http://tind.wipo.int/record/41861},
}