Rethinking the American Animal Rights Movement

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A01=Emily Patterson-Kane
A01=Jennifer Eadie
A01=Michael P. Allen
American Humane Society
Animal Abusers
Animal Advocacy
animal law
Animal Liberation
Animal Rights
animal studies
Animal Welfare
Animal Welfare Science
ASPCA
Author_Emily Patterson-Kane
Author_Jennifer Eadie
Author_Michael P. Allen
Black Beauty
Bob Barker
Category=JBFU
Category=JPW
Category=NHK
Category=NHTB
Critical Animal Studies
Draize test
Empathetic Identifications
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Exploit Animals
Grounding Rights
Human Animal Relations
Human Suffering
hunting
Moral Shock
Nonhuman Animals
PCRM
PETA
Peter Singer
Sea Turtles
Total Liberation
Turtle Soup
Violating

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138915107
  • Weight: 249g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Feb 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Along with Civil Rights and Women’s liberation, Animal Rights became one of leading social moments of the twentieth century. This book critically reviews all principal contributions to the American animal rights debate by activists, campaigners, academics, and lawyers, while placing animal rights in context with other related and competing movements.

Rethinking the American Animal Rights Movement examines the strategies employed within the movement to advance its goals, which ranged from public advocacy and legal reforms to civil disobedience, vigilantism, anarchism, and even "terrorism." It summarizes key theoretical and legal frameworks that inspired those strategies, as well as the ideological motivations of the movement. It highlights the irreconcilable tension between moral and legal rights verses "humane treatment of animals" as prescribed by advocates of animal welfarism. The book also looks back to the nineteenth century origins of the movement, examining its appeal to a sentimentalist conception of rights standing in marked contrast with twentieth century rights theory. After providing an extensive social history of the twentieth century movement, the book subsequently offers a diagnosis of why it stalled at the turn of millennium in its various efforts to advance the cause of nonhuman animals. This diagnosis emphasizes the often-contradictory goals and strategies adopted by the movement in its different phases and manifestations across three centuries.

The book is unique in presenting students, activists, and scholars with a history and critical discussion of its accomplishments, failures, and ongoing complexities faced by the American animal rights movement.

Emily Patterson-Kane is a New Zealand-born psychologist with a focus on animal welfare and human-animal interactions. She has published research on diverse topics including Animal abuse, assistance animals, and environmental enrichment.

Michael Allen is a professor of philosophy at East Tennessee State University. He has published extensively on civil disobedience and crimes of dissent in a variety of contexts from mass illegal human migrations to the illegal hunting of wildlife. His research concerns the tensions between illegal political action and nonviolence philosophy.

Jennifer Eadie lives and works on Kaurna Country in South Australia. She is a teaching academic at the University of South Australia and a Doctoral Candidate at Flinders University, South Australia. Her research is situated in the Environmental Humanities and Critical Legal Studies.

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