University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Soc Stud Sci. 2023 Aug;53(4):599-621. doi: 10.1177/03063127231177455. Epub 2023 Jun 20.
Increasingly, countries in the Global South-notably South Africa, Brazil, and Indonesia-are introducing material transfer agreements (MTAs) into their domestic laws for the exchange of scientific material. The MTA is a contract securing the legal transfer of tangible research material between organizations such as laboratories, pharmaceutical companies, or universities. Critical commentators argue that these agreements in the Global North have come to fulfill an important role in the expansion of dominant intellectual property regimes. Taking Indonesia as a case, this article examines how MTAs are enacted and implemented differently in the context of research involving the Global South. Against the conventionally understood forms of contract that commodify and commercialize materials and knowledge, the MTA in the South can be understood as a legal technology appropriated to translate a formerly relational economy of the scientific gift to a market system of science. As a way of gaining leverage in the uneven space of the global bioeconomy, the MTA functions as a technology for 'reverse appropriation', a reworking of its usage and meaning as a way of countering some of the global power inequalities experienced by Global South countries. The operation of this reverse appropriation, however, is hybrid, and reveals a complex reconfiguration of scientific exchange amidst a growing push for 'open science'.
越来越多的南半球国家——特别是南非、巴西和印度尼西亚——正在将物质转移协议(MTAs)纳入其国内法律,以交换科学物质。MTA 是一份合同,确保实验室、制药公司或大学等组织之间有形研究材料的合法转移。批评者认为,这些在北方国家的协议已经在扩大主导知识产权制度方面发挥了重要作用。本文以印度尼西亚为例,考察了在涉及南半球的研究背景下,MTA 是如何以不同的方式颁布和执行的。与将材料和知识商品化和商业化的传统合同形式不同,南方的 MTA 可以被理解为一种法律技术,将科学礼物的前关系经济转化为科学的市场体系。作为在全球生物经济不平衡空间中获得优势的一种方式,MTA 作为“反向挪用”的一种技术发挥作用,重新利用其用途和意义,以对抗南方国家所经历的一些全球权力不平等。然而,这种反向挪用的运作是混合的,揭示了在日益增长的“开放科学”推动下,科学交流的复杂重构。