Farmers' Rights vs Plant Breeders' Rights: Navigating Justice in Agricultural Innovation
Eshaan Mathur Mathur
Paper Contents
Abstract
This paper examines the legal and ethical tension between farmers rights and plant breeders rights in the context of global agricultural justice. It provides a comparative analysis of international instruments (TRIPS, UPOV, ITPGRFA) and national laws (notably India, the United States, and selected African jurisdictions) that shape intellectual property protection for plant varieties and the corresponding entitlements of farmers. The study explores how different legal regimes balance these rights, highlighting doctrinal issues (e.g. sui generis plant variety protection, patent exemptions) alongside socio-legal perspectives (seed sovereignty movements and public interest interventions). We frame the debate through theories of justice: distributive justice (fair allocation of genetic resources and benefits), procedural justice (inclusion of farmers in decision-making), and restorative justice (remedying past inequities in resource access). Case studies illustrate how grassroots organizations in India (e.g. the Navdanya seed movement), the US (seed freedom coalitions), and Africa (Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa) challenge or adapt national policies to uphold farmers interests. For example, Indias Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers Rights Act, 2001 explicitly recognizes farmers contributions and allows saving and sharing of farm seeds, whereas in parts of Africa strict seed-certification laws have criminalized traditional seed exchange, provoking social resistance. Our analysis shows that prevailing IP-centric regimes often conflict with farmers customary seed practices, raising concerns about equity and human rights. The paper concludes with practical policy recommendationssuch as strengthening benefit-sharing, legalizing farmers seed networks, and aligning national laws with UN Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and ITPGRFA guidelinesto better reconcile farmers and breeders rights in pursuit of agricultural justice.
Copyright
Copyright © 2025 Eshaan Mathur. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License.