Cultural rights of groups focus on religious and ethnic minorities and indigenous societies that are in danger of disappearing. Cultural rights include a group's ability to preserve its way of life, such as child rearing, continuation of
language, and security of its economic base in the nation, which it is located. The cultural rights movement has been popularized because much traditional cultural knowledge has commercial value, like ethno-medicine, cosmetics, cultivated plants, foods,
folklore, arts, crafts, songs, dances, costumes, and
rituals. Studying ancient cultures may reveal evidence about the history of the human race and shed more light on our origin and successive cultural development. However, the study, sharing, and commercialization of such cultural aspects can be hard to achieve without infringing upon the cultural rights of those who are a part of that culture. The commercialized consumption of minority cultures can lead to issues pertaining to
cultural appropriation, such as the infringement of cultural property rights and misrepresentation of cultural identity.
Intangible cultural heritage The preservation of minority cultures includes the protection of
intangible cultural heritage, which are non-material aspects of culture such as practices, language, intellect, spirituality, and value systems. These non-material aspects are recognized as essential, distinctive, and authentic to the cultural group, and are consistently recreated and transmitted to future generations.
Intellectual property rights The related notion of indigenous intellectual property rights (IPR) has arisen in attempt to conserve each society's culture base and prevent
ethnocide. Indigenous groups have argued for their right to control the access and usage of their cultural knowledge and information. To address these concerns, proposals have been suggested: using labels and trademarks on products to indicate their indigenous origins, pursuing moral rights to sacred works in order to attribute credit to indigenous creators and artists, and protecting indigenous knowledge through confidentiality laws. == Legal enforcement of cultural rights ==