Indigenous Australians face interrelated and compounding problems in relation to maintaining, protecting and preserving their ethnobotanical knowledge, such as biopiracy, loss of biodiversity, knowledge, and opportunity. This Indigenous-led project aims to resolve some of these problems by building community-based databases that can protect, preserve, and facilitate further community controlled use of ethnobotanical knowledge.
The project aims to be of direct benefit to the partner communities, by assisting in the support and promotion of Indigenous economic self-sufficiency and sustainability. In addition to providing this direct positive impact to the communities involved in the research, the project is designed to be replicated across Australia to similarly benefit Indigenous communities throughout the country.
This project was secured from the ARC Discovery Indigenous 2023-2026.
Hon. Prof Henrietta Marrie, Honorary Professor, Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation (QAAFI), UQ
Associate Professor Allison Fish, UQ School of Law
Profesor Brad Sherman, TC Beirne School of Law, UQ
Professor Robert Henry, Centre for Crop Science (QAAFI), UQ
Professor Yasmina Sultanbawa, Centre for Nutrition and Food Sciences (QAAFI), UQ
Associate Professor Jane Anderson, Global Fellow in the Engelberg Center for Innovation Law and Policy, Law School, New York University
Associate Professor Maui Hudson, Te Kotahi Research Institute, University of Waikato
