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Animal Rights, Animals - Maintenance, Rescue & Rehabilitation, Ethics & Moral Philosophy - Applied - Environmental
Animal Rights: The Changing Debate by Robert Garner β€” book cover

Animal Rights: The Changing Debate

by Robert Garner
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Overview

Do animals have rights and, if so, what exactly are they? Further, how do these rights relate to human rights? These questions have long bedeviled scientists, philosophers, and animal advocates and today remain as contested as ever.

Combining the writings of leading academics and activists such as Peter Singer and Michael W. Fox, this anthology examines the development of animal rights discourse over the past quarter century to anticipate the future of the debate. Touching on every aspect of human-animal relations, from agriculture and animal experimentation to the animal rights movement in the United States and abroad, the contributors both question and affirm the utility of the concept of rights. Informing this volume is the belief that, regardless of where one stands on the issues of animal rights, it is simply indisputable that how we perceive and treat animals is fundamentally and inextricably related to how we define ourselves.

Synopsis

Do animals have rights and, if so, what exactly are they? Further, how do these rights relate to human rights? These questions have long bedeviled scientists, philosophers, and animal advocates and today remain as contested as ever.

Combining the writings of leading academics and activists such as Peter Singer and Michael W. Fox, this anthology examines the development of animal rights discourse over the past quarter century to anticipate the future of the debate. Touching on every aspect of human-animal relations, from agriculture and animal experimentation to the animal rights movement in the United States and abroad, the contributors both question and affirm the utility of the concept of rights. Informing this volume is the belief that, regardless of where one stands on the issues of animal rights, it is simply indisputable that how we perceive and treat animals is fundamentally and inextricably related to how we define ourselves.

About the Author, Robert Garner

Robert Garner is a Lecturer in Politics at the University of Leicester and author of Animals, Politics and Morality: Environmental Politics.

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Editorials

Booknews

Ten essays consider the changes in the animal rights movement over the past decade and its current status. They cover moral theory such as an eco-socialist view and political strategy such as an incremental approach, medical science and agriculture including such issues as humane sustainable agriculture and technical arguments for using animals in experiments, and the political process in the US and Europe. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
March 1, 1997
Publisher
New York University Press
Pages
160
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780814730980

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