Schrödinger’s Rose: Indeterminacy and Contingent Futures in the Plant Variety Rights System of Aotearoa New Zealand

dc.contributor.authorJefferson, David
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-30T20:28:48Z
dc.date.available2025-01-30T20:28:48Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.description.abstractPlant variety rights, a somewhat obscure and technical form of intellectual property, are often assumed to be conceptually uncomplicated. The two essential purposes of plant variety rights laws are typically to incentivise the creation of novel varieties with useful characteristics and to reward breeders for these efforts. These rationales are seldom questioned. However, plant variety rights regimes might be better understood as open-ended, containing multiple potential futures that are innate though they may never be fully realised. This article reviews a series of Parliamentary debates over the three generations of plant variety rights legislation in Aotearoa New Zealand. The article shows that over time, rather than remain static the perceived rationale for recognising intellectual property for plants in New Zealand has shifted and expanded. Justifications have grown from a narrow focus on supporting a nascent, export-oriented horticultural industry to the endorsement of a broad platform that aims both to promote domestic agricultural innovation and to achieve Indigenous sovereignty over culturally significant plants. The prior indeterminacy that characterises plant variety rights legislation in Aotearoa invokes the metaphor of Schrödinger’s cat, in that these laws’ multiple futures are contingent and may resolve themselves differently depending on whose aspirations are formally recognised and applied in practice. The nature of plant variety rights is therefore spectral, pervaded – both implicitly and sometimes overtly – by the ambitions of different people, as well as by the types of plants and ways of knowing that these laws exclude.
dc.identifier.citationJefferson DJ (2023). Schrödinger’s Rose: Indeterminacy and Contingent Futures in the Plant Variety Rights System of Aotearoa New Zealand. Pólemos. 17(2). 333-346.
dc.identifier.doihttp://doi.org/10.1515/pol-2023-2024
dc.identifier.issn2035-5262
dc.identifier.issn2036-4601
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10092/106550
dc.languageen
dc.publisherWalter de Gruyter GmbH
dc.rightsAll rights reserved unless otherwise stated
dc.rights.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/17651
dc.subjectplant variety rights
dc.subjectAotearoa New Zealand
dc.subjectindigenous knowledge
dc.subjectmātauranga Māori
dc.subjecttaonga plants
dc.subjectparliamentary history
dc.subject.anzsrc48 - Law and legal studies::4806 - Private law and civil obligations::480603 - Intellectual property law
dc.subject.anzsrc48 - Law and legal studies
dc.subject.anzsrc45 - Indigenous studies::4511 - Ngā tāngata, te porihanga me ngā hapori o te Māori (Māori peoples, society and community)
dc.subject.anzsrc45 - Indigenous studies::4511 - Ngā tāngata, te porihanga me ngā hapori o te Māori (Māori peoples, society and community)
dc.subject.mshTaonga
dc.subject.mshMātauranga | Education
dc.titleSchrödinger’s Rose: Indeterminacy and Contingent Futures in the Plant Variety Rights System of Aotearoa New Zealand
dc.typeJournal Article
uc.collegeFaculty of Law
uc.departmentFaculty of Law
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