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Presenter, “The North-South Divide regarding Intellectual Property, Biodiversity and Traditional Knowledge and the Implications for Food Security: A Focus on Indigenous People and Farmers’ Rights”, Paper Presented at the American Association of Geographers (AAG) Annual Conference held in Boston, April 9, 2017

Indigenous Knowledge and Development 

(Sponsored by Environmnetal Perception and Behavioral Geography Specialty Group, Indigenous Peoples Specialty Group) 

Room: Room 109, Hynes, Plaza Level (Paper Session) 

ORGANIZER(S): RDK Herman, National Museum of the American Indian 

CHAIR(S): Paolo Davide Farah, West Virginia University 

  • Mohamed Babiker Ibrahim, Hunter College - CUNY, 1HZ Successful Pass of Development Theory in Africa: The Case of Sudan. 
  • Jean Baptiste Faye, University of Oregon, Farming and Meaning at the Desert's Edge: Can Serer Indigenous Agricultural and Cultural Systems Co-Evolve towards Sustainability?. 
  • Zahra Hussain, University of Durham - Durham, Mapping worldviews through Creative Participatory Research. 
  • Yicong Yang, Cornell University, Human activities and biodiversity: a study of spatial interactions between human settlements and species richness in Brazilian Amazon. 
  • Paolo Davide Farah, West Virginia University, John D. Rockefeller IV School of Policy and Politics, Department of Public Administration,  Divide regarding Intellectual Property, Biodiversity and Traditional Knowledge and the Implications for Food Security: A Focus on Indigenous People and Farmer's Rights.
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