Forests are complex ecosystems that support a diversity of plant and animal life. They also provide resources that local communities rely on. However, forest biodiversity is increasingly threatened by activities like deforestation, fragmentation, and unsustainable extraction of resources. [1]
Access and benefit sharing (ABS) aims to regulate how genetic resources and traditional knowledge from forests can be obtained and used. It seeks to ensure communities consent and share benefits from commercial uses of their resources and knowledge. However, there are gaps in how ABS is implemented regarding forest access, benefit sharing, and protection of traditional knowledge. [2]
ABS frameworks also raise issues around commodifying resources traditionally viewed as communal property. Overall, there are open questions