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Congress
preliminary programme (Español)
Thursday 8 may
The
cultural interbreeding in ethnopharmacology: From indigenous to scientific
knowledges
8,30h.
Registration
9h.
Opening and welcome address
Magnífico. Sr. Rector de la Universitat de València
10h.
Lectures
- Ethnopharmacology:
new perspectives for the next decade
Jacques Fleurentin. Président, Société Française
d’Ethnopharmacologie.
EBSE, Université de Metz, France
- The
sad and true story of research on indigenous medical flora (which tells
what happened after listening to the WHO "tales" for 25 years)
Xavier Lozoya, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, Laboratorio de
Plantas Medicinales del Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI. México.
Coffee-break
12 h.
Lectures
- Tibetan
pharmacopoeia at the crossroads of cultures
Guy Mazars. Institut d’Histoire des Sciences, Université
Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg, France. Président, European Society
of Ethnopharmacology.
- Las
yerbas y la llamada (tanotsalis)”. The ethnopharmacology of the
Nahuas of Sierra de Puebla (Mexico)
Pierre Beaucage. Département d’Anthropologie, Université
de Montréal, Québec, Canada. Profesor visitante Cátedra
UNESCO, 2003. Universitat de València.
Lunch
Indigenous
plants and pharmacopoeias
15,30 h.
Lectures
-
From Ethnomedicine to the development of natural pharmaceutical products
Evangelina Marrero Faz. Presidenta de la Sociedad cubana de Farmacología.
Research Theme on Natural Drugs, National Center for Animal and Plant
Health, La Habana, Cuba.
16,00 h.
Forum
- Plants
in between cultures. The transcultural use of medicinal and nutritional
plants of the Sierra Tarahumara in Mexico. Claus Deimel, Dr. Direktor,
Museum für Völkerkunde zu Leipzig. Grassimuseum, Leipzig,
Germany.
- Caribean
pharmacopoeia: cultural interbreeding and convergence of therapeutic
knowledges
Bernard Weniger, Laboratoire de pharmacognosie, Université Louis
Pasteur de Strasbourg, France. Vice-président, Societé
Française d’Ethnopharmacologie.
- The
rôle of ethnopharmacology in medicinal plants and phytodrugs valuation
in Rumania
Angela Marculescu. Université de Brasov, Roumanie. Président,
Société Roumaine d'Ethnopharmacologie.
-
Research on kava in New Caledonia and hepatic toxicity
Pierre Cabalion. IRD, Nouvelle Calédonie.
Coffee-break
17,30
h.
Posters / Short Communications
19.30h
Guided tour of Valencia historical centre (optional)
Friday 9 may, 2003
Scientific
studies on indigenous plants
9 h.
Lectures
- Quality,
safety and efficacy as the basis for the introduction of Latin- American
medicinal plants in rational Phytotherapy
Salvador Cañigueral. Unitat de Farmacologia i Farmacognòsia,
Facultat de Farmàcia, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain. Coordinador
internacional del Proyecto X.9 del CYTED.
- Traditional
uses of Mesoamerican medicinal plants applied to modern phytotherapy
in Guatemala
Armando Cáceres. Universidad de San Carlos, Facultad de CCQQ
y Farmacia, Laboratorio Farmaya, Guatemala. Coordinador de la Red Iberoamericana
de productos fitofarmacéuticos, CYTED.
Coffee-break
11h
Lectures
- From
ethnobotany to pharmacology: the case of Cannabis sativa from fhe Rif
(Morocco)
Joaquín Molero Mesa, Departamento de Biología Vegetal,
Universidad de Granada, España
- Ethnobotanical
research on food plants and their medicinal uses in Catalonia (Iberian
Peninsula)
Joan Vallès. Laboratori de Botànica, Facultat de Farmàcia,
Universitat de Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.
- Validation
of medicinal plants central activity: theory and practice
Thereza Christina Monteiro de Lima Nogueira. CCB. Departamento de Farmacología,
Universidad Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil. Coordinadora de la Red
iberomaericana para la validación de plantas medicinales.
- The
CYTED experience and the X.6 project
María José Alcaraz. Departamento de Farmacología,
Universidad de Valencia, Valencia, España. Coordinadora internacional
del proyecto X.6 CYTED.
- Search
and evaluation of new natural agents with antiinflamatory and antiarthritic
activity
María del Carmen Terencio Silvestre. Departamento de Farmacología,
Universidad de Valencia, Valencia. España.
Lunch
15.30h.
Cultural
interbreeding in ethnopharmacology: the Euro- American case
The interbred
vision of Nature
Lecture
- The
comparative Natural History of Antonio de Ulloa
Lewis Pyenson. PhD, FRSC, SLEMCO/Board of Regents Professor of Liberal
Arts. Research Professor, Center for Louisiana Studies. Professor of
History. Adjunct Professor of Cognitive Science, Philosophy, Physics,
and Modern Languages. University of Louisiana at Lafayette. Lafayette,
Louisiana (US).
16.15h.
Foods
and drugs
Forum
- The
incorporation of American materia medica to European therapeutic arsenal:
folk knowledges, empiricism and classical science
José Luis Fresquet Febrer. Director, Instituto de Historia de
la Ciencia y Documentación, Universidad de Valencia – CSIC,
Valencia, España.
- The
European reception of American plants along 16th century (1530-1600)
Maria Luz López Terrada. Instituto de Historia de la Ciencia
y Documentación, Universidad de Valencia – CSIC, Valencia.
España.
- The
European reception of Francisco Hernández expedition (1570-1577)
materia medica
José Pardo Tomás. Institució Milà i Fontanals,
CSIC, Barcelona, España.
- Nationalism
and science: the “new” American plants in 19th century Northamerican
materia medica
Carla P. Aguirre Marco. Instituto de Historia de la Ciencia y Documentación,
Universidad de Valencia – CSIC, Valencia, España.
- Medicine
in México at the beginning of the Colony
Raquel Álvarez . Instituto de Historia, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones
Científicas, Madrid, España.
Coffee-break
18h.
Posters / Short Communications
Saturday
10 may, 2003
9h.
Forum
Herbal
medicinal products in the European regulatory framework
- Future
European directive on traditional herbal medicinal products: quality,
safety and efficacy.
Estelle Coquillette. Post-authorisation evaluation of medicines for
human use Unit. EMEA European Agency for the Evaluation of Medicinal
Products. London, UK.
- Herbal
medicinal products in Spanish legislation
Diego Martínez Marín. Subdirector adjunto de la Agencia
Española del Medicamento. Ministerio de Sanidad y Consumo, Madrid,
España.
- Regulations
on plant-based medical products in France.
Guy Balansard. Laboratoire de pharmacognosie, Faculté de pharmacie
de Marseille, France - Membre du groupe plantes à l'AFSSAPS (Ministère
de la santé) - Vice-président de la Société
Française d'Ethnopharmacologie
- Ethnopharmacology
and ethics: People´s intellectual property rights on their biocultural
biodiversity
Jamal Bellakhdar . Maroc. Société Française d'Ethnopharmacologie
10,30h.
Forum
NGOs
and ethnopharmacology. Traditional and scientific knowledges adapted:
an alliance serving to sanitary development
- Ethnopharmacology
in cooperation projets of Medicus Mundi
Rosa Ballester. Medicus Mundi. Unidad de Historia de la Medicina, Universidad
Miguel Hernández, Alicante, España.
- Intervention
of ethnopharmacology in human and veterinary medicine: collaboration
with Veterinarios sin Fronteras teams and Médecins du Mond in
Guatemala
Jean-Pierre Nicolas. Laboratoire de botanique, Faculté de pharmacie
de Lille II, France. Jardins du Mond (Guatemala, Honduras, Ecuador).
- Traditional
and modern medicine in Latin-America. Cultural aspects of health
Katarina Greifeld. Ethnologist. International expert in evaluation of
efficacy of Governmental and NGO’s projects.
Coffee-break
12,30h.
Conclusions and perspectives
- Guy Mazars,
Université de Strasbourg. European Society of Ethnopharmacology
- Jacques
Fleurentin, Societé Française d’Ethnopharmacologie.
Université de Metz
- Antonio
Guerci. Universitá degli Studi di Genova
- Carla
P. Aguirre Marco, Universidad de Valencia - CSIC
- Ekkehard
Schröder, European Society of Ethnopharmacology, Germany
- Xavier
Lozoya. Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social. Laboratorio de Plantas
Medicinales del Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI, México
D.F.
14,30 h.
Official Lunch of the Congress
16h.
Guided visit to the Natural Park of Albufera (optional)
Located south of Valencia, about 11km. from the capital, and separated
from the sea by a thin stretch of sand dunes held in place by Mediterranean
pines and shrubs, this lagoon was formed in prehistoric times as a result
of the accumulation of sediments from two nearby rivers on a barrier that
formed an inland freshwater lake. Today, this lake measures 6 km. in diameter,
with hundreds of navigable canals crisscrossing the surrounding area.
Traditionally, people leaving near the shore grow rice, hunt fowl and
fish, having harmoniously interacting with the environment for centuries.
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