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10 - Facilitating Material Transfer Agreements from a Practitioner’s Perspective

from Part III - Solutions: Standard Material Transfer Agreements, Repositories, and Specialized International Instruments

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2020

Sam F. Halabi
Affiliation:
University of Missouri-Columbia School of Law
Rebecca Katz
Affiliation:
Georgetown University Center for Global Health Science and Security
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Summary

Chapter 10 “moves” the audience out of the scientific and ethical location in the theoretically low-resource but biodiverse country, and into the negotiating room where terms of sharing human pathogens occur. With decades of experience behind them, Mowatt and Ranjan cover the importance of human pathogen sharing from the perspective of the world’s most prominent biomedical research institution, the process through which sharing arises and is negotiated, the most frequent and salient barriers to sharing including isolating pathogens in the first place and then bargaining for them, mechanisms to reduce barriers to sharing including repositories and standardized agreements. Mowatt and Ranjan spend a significant amount of the chapter discussing the evolution of standardized agreements, and how those agreements functioned in recent public health emergencies including Ebola, Zika, and MERS-CoV. The authors identify common terms and conditions, disputes over publication and use of research results, rights in inventions developed during use, liability and other concerns. They provide nuance to these broad categories including the distorting influence of perceived value of material like devices or drugs, and proposed use such as discovery, pre-clinical, or clinical application.

Type
Chapter
Information
Viral Sovereignty and Technology Transfer
The Changing Global System for Sharing Pathogens for Public Health Research
, pp. 174 - 192
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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