13 research outputs found
Bioprospecting and deep-sea genetic resources in a fragmenting international law
This thesis investigates if public international law manages to function as a coherent system in the case of deep-sea bioprospecting, where rules in three regimes provide seemingly inconsistent obligations for states. Based on an investigation of the development of bioprospecting and patenting of deep-sea genetic resources, the study explores how rules in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the World Trade Organization Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (WTO TRIPS) apply to such activities. It is illustrated how rules of these treaties provide different and seemingly inconsistent obligations for states in the context of deep-sea bioprospecting. This is explained by their origin in different regimes of public international law with distinctively dissimilar perspectives on the appropriation of genetic resources.
It is discussed how the prima facie norm conflict in some cases can be resolved on the basis of the principles on treaty application and interpretation under the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties. In other cases, such as the obligations for bioprospecting of deep-seabed micro-organisms, states are faced with an irreconcilable dilemma; the different treaty obligations cannot be simultaneously applied. In order to prevent such conflicts and ensure the credibility of international law as a functioning system, new approaches are suggested, in particular the development of holistic conflict clauses and lex specialis. The case of deep-sea bioprospecting calls for a more state-oriented perspective in the debate on the fragmentation of international law
Validation of a Food Frequency Questionnaire for dietary vitamin D and calcium by cognitive interviewing
Reproducibility of a web-based Food frequency Questionnaire for 14 years old Danish adolescents
Socioeconomic differences in cardiometabolic risk markers are mediated by diet and fatness in Danish children
The effects of substitution dietary guidelines on dietary intake: the DIPI single-blinded randomized controlled trial
XXIX Congresso de iniciação científica e tecnológica da UFRN - eCICT 2018
Anais 29º Congresso de Iniciação Científica e Tecnológica (eCICT) realizado pela a Pró-Reitoria de Pesquisa da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte. A 29ª edição do Congresso teve como tema “Ciência para Redução das Desigualdades”, estando alinhada aos 17 Objetivos do Desenvolvimento
Sustentável da Agenda 2030 da ONU