Chandan Roy, PhD, is an Assistant Professor-cum-Junior Scientist in the Department of Plant Breeding and Genetics, Bihar Agricultural University, Sabour, Bhagalpur, India. He is the author of several books and book chapters, as well as over a dozen peer-reviewed journal research papers and articles, and he has presented research findings at more than 10 seminar/symposia. Presently he is the In-Charge of Intellectual Property Right Cell of Bihar Agricultural University, as well as the university’s Nodal Officer of the national-level program on PPV&FRA-2001 (Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers' Rights Act, 2001). He has delivered lectures on different aspects of international property rights (IPR) at state- and national-level institutes. He has also conducted a national conference on IPR in agriculture. In addition, he is engaged in an awareness generation program among the farmers of Bihar, India, regarding farmers’ rights; he has trained more than 3500 farmers regarding IPR and framers’ rights. Dr. Roy is a member of the national-level expert committee on registration of essentially derived varieties (EDVs) under the PPV&FR Act 2001, Government of India. He is also a member of the Prioritization, Monitoring and Evaluation (PME) Cell of the university extension and training group. Dr. Roy is engaged in teaching of undergraduate and postgraduate students and directs research activities in the wheat and cauliflower improvement program.
Essential reading for those interested in agricultural law, biodiversity regulation and proposals for the regulation of access to genetic resources. . . . India has taken the lead in the protection of farmers' rights and farmers' varieties, and in international discussions on the protection of genetic resources, and this volume of Indian scholarship on Indian intellectual property law and agriculture provides an alternative perspective to the Western scholarship on intellectual property rights (IPRs). In addition to chapters on intellectual property and agriculture, it looks at the relationship between biodiversity conservation and intellectual property. -European Intellectual Property Review, 41(7), 2019, Review by Michael Blakeney, University of Western Australia