3. Discussions
The phenomenon of biopiracy serves as a stark mirror reflecting the structural imbalance ingrained within the international legal order—an imbalance that transcends mere technical or normative deficits and permeates dimensions of social justice, ethical legitimacy, and the sovereignty of nation-states over their biological wealth. In this context, countries of the Global South—particularly those endowed with high biodiversity—frequently occupy vulnerable positions, becoming prime targets for exploitation by multinational entities that exploit loopholes within both domestic and international legal frameworks. Far from serving as protectors of the underprivileged, law often operates as an instrument that legitimizes exploitation under the sanctity of formal legality.
Historically, the case of turmeric patenting in India in the mid-1990s illustrates the consequences of inadequate systematic documentation of traditional knowledge within global intellectual property regimes. When two U.S. researchers were granted a patent for turmeric’s wound-healing use, despite long-documented Ayurvedic practices in India, the lack of accessible prior art enabled a foreign claim on knowledge held in trust by local communities for centuries. India’s invocation of prior art to overturn the U.S. patent underscores two critical realities: first, that undocumented traditional knowledge is vulnerable to expropriation; and second, that the absence of mandatory disclosure of origin within the TRIPS framework constitutes fertile ground for legal forms of biopiracy.
A similar narrative unfolded in Brazil, where global cosmetic corporations patented extracts from copaiba and andiroba—rich Amazonian resources—without consent from indigenous communities. This exploitation propelled Brazil to enact Law No. 13.123/2015, featuring a national registry and stringent Access and Benefit-Sharing (ABS) requirements. However, legislation alone proved insufficient, as enforcement remained hampered by limitations in political commitment, funding, and institutional capacity—revealing that formal legal recognition does not automatically guarantee substantive justice. (Secom 2024)
In East Africa, Ethiopia's experience with teff—a staple cereal and cultural emblem—demonstrates how European patent systems can disregard collective claims rooted in ethnic identity and communal practice. Although a Dutch entity eventually lost its patent, the symbolic and economic harms endured by Ethiopian farmers point to a broader pattern: global intellectual property structures remain aligned with Western proprietary paradigms at the expense of indigenous stakeholders.
Turning to Indonesia, a megadiverse nation with extraordinary biological and epistemic richness, the Shiseido case stands out conspicuously. Eleven bioactive compounds derived from Indonesian jamu were patented for cosmetic use with zero involvement of local communities or benefit-sharing mechanisms. Similar appropriation occurred in patents claimed over Tongkat Ali, Kaempferia rotunda (Kunci Pepet), and Pegagan—plants rooted in local custom and medicinal usage, resold at high prices to local populations who receive no form of compensation. These incidents underscore the persistent vulnerability of Indonesia’s biodiversity heritage in the absence of robust legal safeguards.
Indonesia has sought to address these challenges through ratification of the Nagoya Protocol via Law No. 11/2013 and Ministerial Regulation P.92/2018, establishing a domestic legal framework for ABS. Despite these normative advances, enforcement remains fragmented and sectorally siloed. Responsibility is dispersed across the Ministry of Environment and Forestry, the Ministry of Law and Human Rights, the Ministry of Research and Technology, and the Ministry of Education and Culture—without unified oversight. Critically, there is no national registry equivalent to India’s Traditional Knowledge Digital Library (TKDL), and local communities lack the legal literacy and resources to assert their rights within national or global fora.
The illicit appropriation of biodiversity is often camouflaged under the veneer of legitimate research or eco-tourism. The 2012 case involving a British student collecting biological samples in Kalimantan, and a 2017 incident of a French national smuggling rare Ornithoptera goliath butterflies from Papua, exemplify this “gray zone.” In these scenarios, the absence of digital traceability systems and robust verification mechanisms renders administrative permits insufficient to distinguish lawful endeavor from covert extraction, challenging regulators and emboldening exploitative behavior.
Indonesia’s intellectual property regime—rooted in an individualistic and liberal understanding of rights—currently fails to recognize collective knowledge or communal innovation. Traditional knowledge is often shared across generations and lacks singular ownership, making it ineligible for patent protection under conventional standards. This disconnect between legal theory and cultural reality weakens moral legitimacy and allows multinational actors to appropriate communal knowledge through procedural technicalities, undermining the communal compact that sustains indigenous stewardship.
It is within this troubled landscape that the philosophy of Rudolf von Jhering offers critical insight. Rejecting normative legal formalism, Jhering conceptualizes law as a site of struggle (Kampf ums Recht), an instrument of social contestation rather than a static framework. Law, to Jhering, is not neutral; it is designed to side with the just. Mere regulatory formalism—a proliferation of statutes or procedural guidelines—is insufficient. Rather, law must be wielded strategically and proactively to dismantle structural inequities.
In the fight against biopiracy, a Jhering-inspired teleological approach demands more than technical compliance. It calls for a robust civil society and activist-oriented legal posture: one that orchestrates litigation to challenge illegitimate patents, convenes community mobilization for enforcement of prior art, and leverages transparent public review mechanisms. The State, legally and morally compelled, must support these endeavors, reinforcing litigation with policy backing and funding.
From a diplomatic standpoint, such an approach necessitates proactive engagement in international policy fora. Indonesia could spearhead an alliance across the Global South to lobby for amendments to the TRIPS Agreement—mandating disclosure of origin, ensuring mandatory prior informed consent, and enhancing protections for communal rights. In parallel, it could advocate for the Nagoya Protocol to include enforceable cross-border mechanisms against ABS violations and monetary reparation for affected communities.
Domestically, the establishment of a single ABS authority—the National ABS Management Agency—could unify administrative processes while fostering digital traceability and community-contributed knowledge registries. Legislative reform to explicitly recognize communal intellectual property through amendments to patent law should follow, enabling community-based patent oppositions and access to state-supported legal services. This form of law-based activism epitomizes collective resistance—transforming legal conflict into a platform for embedding ecological justice.
Culture and education also play pivotal roles. Legal ecological literacy campaigns—from grassroots to academic levels—would empower indigenous and rural communities to document, assert, and legally defend their rights. Such a paradigm transcends compliance; it cultivates skeptical and informed citizens who hold state and corporations accountable.
Jhering’s doctrine around moral perseverance emphasizes that law gains vitality through the resistance it enables. Applied to biopiracy, this resistance involves confronting privatization of communal heritage and asserting legal primacy of ecological stewardship over narrow commercial gains(Roscoe 1911). Indonesia stands at a crossroads: will its legal order function as a shield for non-state exploitation, or be reclaimed as an instrument of ecological justice?
Achieving biological sovereignty requires a two-pronged strategy: internally, by building coherent, participatory, and well-enforced legal infrastructures; and externally, by reshaping international intellectual property norms to affirm collective rights. This synergy—grounded in Jhering’s vision—can help Indonesia escape the trap of exploitative global frameworks and emerge as a beacon of transformative biodiversity governance.
In sum, Indonesia’s path forward demands that law be more than a passive regulator: it must actively combat injustice, support community agency, and foster environmental stewardship across generations. Only then can ecological justice transcend technical compliance, culminating in a reimagined form of Rechtskampf—a morally infused struggle for sovereignty, justice, and the preservation of life itself.
The protection of biodiversity and genetic resources has evolved into a strategic legal issue positioned at the intersection of environmental law, intellectual property regimes, and national sovereignty. For Indonesia—a megadiverse country—striking a balance between the sustainable utilization of its genetic assets and the imperative to safeguard against biopiracy presents a multifaceted legal and political challenge. The rise of biotechnological innovation and global demand for tropical bioresources have exacerbated the risks of unauthorized access and misappropriation, often disadvantaging the communities that have historically stewarded such resources.
Indonesia has undertaken several commendable legal initiatives by ratifying the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the Nagoya Protocol, and by introducing a range of national regulations to operationalize access and benefit-sharing (ABS) principles. Nevertheless, the implementation of these instruments remains fraught with institutional fragmentation, low legal awareness at the community level, and insufficient enforcement mechanisms. Only a limited portion of Indonesia’s CBD and Nagoya Protocol commitments have been translated into enforceable national legislation, creating legal gaps that are routinely exploited.
On the global stage, the asymmetry between national efforts to protect biodiversity and the legal infrastructure of international intellectual property rights—particularly under the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)—poses a significant structural dilemma. The TRIPS regime, with its emphasis on private and individual rights, often clashes with the collective, communal, and intergenerational nature of traditional knowledge and genetic resources. Cases of biopiracy—where foreign corporations obtain patents based on endemic Indonesian plants such as Centella asiatica (pegagan) or Eurycoma longifolia (tongkat ali) without equitable benefit-sharing—highlight the enduring inequities embedded in current global IP norms.
Drawing on Rudolf von Jhering’s theory of law as a social struggle rooted in utilitarian ends, this article argues that the law must serve the broader public interest and protect the societal values embedded in traditional ecological knowledge. In this context, biodiversity governance in Indonesia should not be limited to conservation or regulatory compliance but must embody a broader vision of ecological justice and cultural sovereignty. We are better off with the traditional utilitarian explanation for intellectual property, because it at least attempts to strike an appropriate balance between control by inventors and creators and the baseline norm of competition. If we must fall back on a physical-world analogy for intellectual property protection – and I see no reason why we should – treating intellectual property as a form of government subsidy is a more apt description than treating it as real property. (Lemley 2004)
A comprehensive legal strategy is therefore necessary—one that incorporates the development of sui generis legal systems recognizing communal intellectual property rights, mandates disclosure of origin in patent applications, establishes robust national databases of traditional knowledge and genetic resources, and empowers local and Indigenous communities as rightful legal subjects. Such reforms must be accompanied by proactive legal diplomacy within international fora such as WIPO and the WTO, advocating for substantive reforms to patent regimes and recognition of biocultural rights.