Biodiversity Information Science and Standards :
Conference Abstract
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Corresponding author: Jutta Buschbom (jutta.buschbom@statistical-genetics.de)
Received: 14 Sep 2021 | Published: 14 Sep 2021
© 2021 Jutta Buschbom, Breda Zimkus, Andrew Bentley, Mariko Kageyama, Christopher Lyal, Dirk Neumann, Andra Waagmeester, Alex Hardisty
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation:
Buschbom J, Zimkus BM, Bentley A, Kageyama M, Lyal CH.C, Neumann D, Waagmeester A, Hardisty A (2021) Participative Decision Making and the Sharing of Benefits: Laws, ethics, and data protection for building extended global communities. Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 5: e75168. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.5.75168
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Transdisciplinary and cross-cultural cooperation and collaboration are needed to build extended, densely interconnected information resources. These are the prerequisites for the successful implementation and execution of, for example, an ambitious monitoring framework accompanying the post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD;
Data infrastructures that meet the requirements and preferences of concerned communities can focus and attract community involvement, thereby promoting participatory decision making and the sharing of benefits. Community acceptance, in turn, drives the development of the data resources and data use. Earlier this year, the
The multitudes of connections that arise from extending the digital specimen representations through linkages in all “directions” will form a powerful network of information for research and application. Yet, with the power of an extended, accessible data network comes the responsibility to protect sensitive information (e.g., the locations of threatened populations, culturally context-sensitive traditional knowledge, or businesses’ fundamental data and infrastructure assets). In addition, existing legislation regulates access and the fair and equitable sharing of benefits. Current negotiations on ‘Digital Sequence Information’ under the CBD suggest such obligations might increase and become more complex in the context of extensible information networks. For example, in the case of data and resources funded by taxpayers in the EU, such access should follow the general principle of being “as open as possible; as closed as is legally necessary” (cp.
Summarizing main outcomes from the consultation discussions in the forum thread “Meeting legal/regulatory, ethical and sensitive data obligations” (
Balancing the needs for open access, as well as protection, accountability and sustainability, the framework is designed to function as a robust interface between the (research) infrastructure implementing the extensible network of digital specimen representations, and the myriad of applications and operations in the real world.
With the legal, ethical and data protection layers of the framework in place, the infrastructure will provide legal clarity and security for data providers and users, specifically in the context of access and benefit sharing under the CBD and its Nagoya Protocol.
Forming layers of protection, the characteristics and functionalities of the framework are envisioned to be flexible and finely-grained, adjustable to fulfill the needs and preferences of a wide range of stakeholders and communities, while remaining focused on the protection and rights of the natural world. Respecting different value systems and national policies, the framework is expected to allow a divergence of views to coexist and balance differing interests. Thus, the infrastructure of the digital extensible specimen network is fair and equitable to many providers and users. This foundation has the capacity and potential to bring together the diverse global communities using, managing and protecting biodiversity.
extended specimen concept, biodiversity information network, data infrastructure, access and benefit sharing, Convention on Biological Diversity, CARE, Local Contexts-labels, licenses, permits, use and loan agreements, sensitive data, EU Taxonomy-regulation, social and ecological footprints
Jutta Buschbom
TDWG 2021
Many thanks to all contributors to the discussions in Phase 1 and Phase 2 of the Consultation for a digital and extended specimen concept of the Alliance for Biodiversity Knowledge.