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* The complexities of animal behavior revealed in the last few
decades are astonishing, but what are the implications? * Do
animals experience the world in a similar way to humans, and do
they have a similar capacity for suffering and enjoyment? If they
do, does it matter? * Should we mind that farmed animals can be
confined all their lives and are sacrificed for human consumption?
* Humans have long used animals for social and economic purposes,
but should we, and can we afford to, think about it and make
changes? * The use of animals for meat, for hide, for their labor
and in laboratories has been justified with the assumption that
unlike humans, animals aren't fully sentient beings. * This book
challenges that assumption with groundbreaking new research that
brings into question everything we've ever thought about the ways
animals experience the world. * Over twenty contributions from
internationally-renowned experts on animal behavior and
agriculture, including big names such as Jane Goodall, Tim Lang,
and Vandana ShivaIn this book, internationally respected
contributors are brought together for the first time to debate and
attempt to answer these questions. The first sections discuss
scientific and ethical perspectives on the consciousness, emotions,
and mental abilities of animals. Later sections address how human
activities such as science, law, farming, food production, trade,
development, and education respect or ignore animals' sentience and
welfare, and review the options for changes in our thinking,
policies, and practices.Published with Compassion in World Farming
Trust.
The determination of when, how, how often and with whom an animal
breeds is moving rapidly away from evolutionary pressures and
towards human purposes: these include the breeding of around 50
billion mammals and birds for food production annually, the
breeding of pedigree dogs and cats, racing dogs and horses,
specialised laboratory animal strains and the use of reproductive
science to conserve endangered species or breeds and to limit
unwanted populations of pests and non-native species. But the
ethics and sustainability of this takeover of animals' reproductive
lives have been insufficiently examined by either professionals or
the public. This book discusses the methods, the motivations and
the consequences of human intervention in animal breeding in terms
of animal health, behaviour and well-being. It explores where we
are now and the choices ahead, and looks to a future where we have
more respect for animals as sentient beings and where we could
loosen the reins of reproductive control.
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