About this topic
Summary

Broadly construed, animal ethics is an area of inquiry and debate that focuses on a variety of approaches to assessing the moral status of nonhuman animals. One of the main approaches in contemporary scholarship is deontological and argues for strict rights for animals on the grounds that they are subjects-of-a-life (Tom Regan) and thus possess inherent worth; such views often seek to expand Kant's ascription of inherent worth to rational agents so that it applies to all sentient beings. Other views, including those of some secular naturalists, seek to ascribe moral status to animals not on the basis of inherent worth but on the basis of capacities shared by all sentient beings. Another main approach encompasses a variety of views that tend to be "welfarist" in the sense that they do not seek to ascribe strict right to animals but instead argue that certain actions performed against animals (such as killing them or using them as sources of milk or eggs) are permissible as long as human beings perform them in a humane manner. Welfarist views are generally utilitarian in character, being based on calculations of the quantity of harm that can be done to a given living being, and they tend to assert hierarchies in which beings that are cognitively more sophisticated can be harmed in ways in which beings that are cognitively less sophisticated cannot; on the basis of such hierarchization, welfarist views typically ascribe moral superiority to human beings over nonhuman animals, although they also tend to avoid a speciesistic privileging of all human beings over all nonhuman animals on the grounds that some nonhuman animals are cognitively superior to some human beings. Thus thinkers such as Peter Singer argue that self-conscious beings have a stronger claim to life than non-self-conscious beings, where self-conscious beings are defined as those that can conceptualize the past, present, and future of their lives as one coherent whole. (Summary written by Gary Steiner and Erwin Lengauer)

Key works

Armstrong, Susan /  Botzler, Richard (ed.) ²2008. The Animal Ethics Reader - (AER). 2nd Edition. London; New York, NY, Routledge. 

Beauchamp, Tom L. / Frey, Raymond G. (eds.) 2011. The Oxford Handbook of Animal Ethics. Oxford, Oxford University Press.

Bekoff, Marc (ed.) 2010. Encyclopedia of Animal Rights and Animal Welfare. 2 Volume Set. Santa Barbara, CA, Greenwood Press, Imprint of ABC - Clio. 

Cavalieri, Paola 2001. The Animal Question: Why Non-Human Animals Deserve Human Rights. Oxford, Oxford University Press. 

Chapouthier, Georges (ed.) 1998. The Universal Declaration of Animal Rights: Comments and Intentions. Paris, Ligue Francaise des Droit de l´Animal.

DeGrazia, David (1996). Taking Animals Seriously. Mental Life and Moral Status. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Dombrowski, Daniel A. 1997. Babies and Beasts: The Argument from Marginal Cases. Urbana, IL, University of Illinois Press.

Francione, Gary  2008. Animals as Persons: Essays on the Abolition of Animal Exploitation. New York, NY, Columbia University Press.

Garner, Robert 2005. The Political Theory of Animal Rights (Perspectives on Democratization). Manchester, Manchester University Press.

Kalof, Linda / Fitzgerald, Amy (eds.). 2007. The Animals Reader: The Essential Classic and Contemporary Writings. Oxford, Berg.  

Munro, Lyle 2005. Confronting Cruelty. Moral Orthodoxy and the Challenge of the Animal Rights Movement. Human-Animal Studies.  (Dissertation). Leiden, Brill Academic.     

Palmer, Clare (ed.) 2008. Animal Rights. Clare Palmer. Series: The International Library of Essays on Rights. Aldershot, GB, Ashgate Publishing Company.

Pluhar, Evelyn 1995. Beyond Prejudice. The Moral Significance of Human and Nonhuman Animals. Durham, NC, Duke University Press.

Regan, Tom 1983. The Case for Animal Rights. Berkeley, CA, University of California Press.

Rollin, Bernard  ²1992. Animal Rights and Human Morality. Amherst, Prometheus.

Rowlands, Mark ²2009. Animal Rights. Moral Theory and Practice. London, Macmillan Press.

Sapontzis, Steve F. 1987, ²1992. Morals, Reason and Animals. Philadelphia, PA, Temple University Press.

Singer, Peter 1975, ²1990. Animal Liberation. A New Ethics for our Treatment of Animals. New York, NY, New York Review of Book.

Singer, Peter (ed.) 2006. In Defense of Animals. The Second Wave. Malden, Blackwell.

Steiner, Gary 2008. Animals and the Moral Community: Mental Life, Moral Status, and Kinship. New York, NY, Columbia University Press.

Steiner, Gary. 2013. Animals and the Limits of Postmodernism. New York: Columbia University Press.

Introductions Regan, Tom 2001. Animals, treatment of. In: Becker, Lawrence (ed.). Encyclopedia of Ethics. New York, Routledge: 70-74 (on page 72 about Inherentism)

Regan, Tom ³2004. Animal Welfare and Rights. In:  Post, Stephen (ed.). Encyclopedia of Bioethics. 3. edition. New York, NY, Macmillan. E-Book Version

Wilson, Scott 2010. Animals and Ethics In: Fieser, James (ed.). Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Martin, TN, The University of Tennessee at Martin. –

Wise, Steve M. 2011. animal rights. Encyclopaedia Britannica: Retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/25760/animal-rights 

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  1. Take a Stand, You Don't Have to Make a Difference.Huzeyfe Demirtas - forthcoming - Erkenntnis.
    Many of our large-scale problems that arise only recently in human history and in an industrialized global world present us with a unique challenge. Often while people collectively make a difference, individual actions are inconsequential. Consider climate change. We all collectively contribute to its unwanted consequences. But individual actions are inconsequential: One more or one less person taking a joyride in a gas-guzzler on a Sunday afternoon makes no difference regarding these consequences. Donating to charity, voting, buying fair trade products, (...)
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  2. Animals and the Environment in Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy.Crystal Addey, Sophia Connell & Miira Tuominen (eds.) - forthcoming - Routledge.
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  3. Messy Eating: Conversations on Animals as Food.Michael Swistara - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):231-234.
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  4. Kindred Spirits: One Animal Family.Mark Causey - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):228-229.
    The American philosopher Thomas Nagel famously argued that no matter how many objective facts we may know about bats, we cannot know what it is like to be a bat. There is an irreducible subjectivity to the experience of being a bat. I can only imagine what it would be like for a subject like me to be a bat but never what it is like for the actual bat to be a bat.In her book, Benvenuti demonstrates extraordinary sensitivity to (...)
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  5. Animal Traffic: Lively Capital in the Global Exotic Pet Trade.Carol Kline - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):229-231.
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  6. The Internet of Animals: Human-Animal Relationships in the Digital Age.Randy Malamud - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):225-228.
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  7. Rescue Me: On Dogs and Their Humans.Faith Bjalobok - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):223-225.
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  8. Animals in Irish Society: Interspecies Oppression and Vegan Liberation in Britain's First Colony.Rebecca Jenkins - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):221-223.
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  9. Animals and Ambiguity in Timothy Findley's Not Wanted on the Voyage.Ian J. Wiebe - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):201-207.
    Timothy Findley's Not Wanted on the Voyage is a radical postmodern retelling of the biblical flood narrative, offering an invitation to empathy as well as a dark indictment of tyrannic religious structures. Findley begins by establishing a space of empathy with (and openness to) the experiences of animals and other marginalized groups within the context of religiously backed oppression. From that space of empathy, he leads an examination of the structure of religious tyranny, specifically contrasting a tyrannic response to ambiguity (...)
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  10. Responding to Animal Suffering in Transit by Steam in 19th-Century Britain.Chien-Hui Li - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):123-143.
    In the 1830s and 1840s, animal transportation by rail and steamer gradually replaced traditional long-distance droving in Britain. Responding to the posthumanist calls for critical attention to the experience of nonhuman actors in history, this article first explores how each aspect of this new mode of transportation affected the bodily experience of the animals, including their embarkation, stowage, ventilation and other uses of equipment fitted on the vessel, the provision of care, and disembarkation. It then discusses how those people who (...)
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  11. Picturing Pigs: A New Aesthetic.Shannon Johnstone & Jane M. Casteline - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):153-169.
    The depiction of pigs as caricatures and happy farmed animals represents a strategic marketing ploy on behalf of the U.S. Big Agriculture industry to distance the public from real pigs and dull empathy toward farmed animals. As two animal-loving photographers and animal rights activists who live in North Carolina (the state with the second-largest producer of pork in the United States), we created a billboard advocacy project called “Picturing Pigs” to counter Big Agriculture's marketing through positive imagery of rescued pigs. (...)
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  12. Attending to Animals and Animal Attention.Nora Ward - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):170-185.
    This article considers the moral significance of paying attention to animals. In particular, it highlights the potential of environmental attentiveness to disclose animal reality beyond anthropocentric modes of perception. Yet, a possible danger associated with highlighting attention-as-revelation is that human attention becomes centered as the primary mechanism for acquiring normative truths, and there is a consequent ambiguity relating to the role of the attended-to-other. To mitigate this, the article argues that shifting to animal attention may help to conceive of, and (...)
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  13. Animal Property Rights as a Decolonial Project.Antoni Mikocki - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):208-220.
    This work undertakes a normative assessment of the problem of colonization of the habitats of free-roaming (“wild”) animals and proposes a normatively guided institutional solution. The first part of the article identifies the colonial wrongs associated with the colonization of animal habitat. The article contends that the defining injustice of the colonization of animal habitats consists in the violation of the animals’ collective and individual property rights—that is, their “habitat rights.” These rights are grounded in the interest the animals have (...)
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  14. Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, and Animal Slaughter: The Embodiment of Necropolitical Dystopia.Tomaž Grušovnik & Maša Blaznik - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):186-200.
    Artificial intelligence and robotics have revolutionized slaughterhouse operations, allowing collaborative robots to reduce the physical and moral stress on butchers. However, animals remain an “absent referent” in the process, and the development of artificial intelligence in this field continues the trend of moral distancing present in killing. This dystopian scenario, in which machines endlessly breed and kill animals, and in which the avoidance of moral responsibility is aided by artificial intelligence so that effectively no one has to bear the burden (...)
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  15. Humanity in Animal Relationships: Some Glimpses from Korean Literary Tradition.Marion Eggert - 2015 - Bochumer Jahrbuch Zur Ostasienforschung 38:449-460.
    Cultural conceptions of humanity (the quality of being human) hinge to a large extent on the distinctions drawn between human and non-human animals. The question of how much humanity (the quality of being humane) is both ascribed and extended to animals certainly contributes considerably to this conceptualization. As a first foray into questions about the construction and depiction of human-animal relationships in pre-modern Korean literature, this article looks at the literary treatment of three kinds of domestic animals – cats, dogs, (...)
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  16. Book Review: Wild Animal Ethics: The Moral and Political Problem of Wild Animal Suffering. [REVIEW]B. V. E. Hyde - 2024 - Environmental Values 33 (5):573-575.
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  17. Survival at stake: how our treatment of animals is key to human existence.Poorva Joshipura - 2023 - Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India: HarperCollins Publishers. Edited by Dia Mirza.
    With science now recognizing animal consciousness, intelligence, emotion and even morality, there must come an awareness of our own moral responsibilites towards other beings. But there's another reason to consider animals' well-being--because it is intertwined with our own. In Survival at Stake, leading animal rights activist Poorva Joshipura argues passionately that, evolutionarily, humans are far more like other animals than we care to believe. She examines how hunting wildlife leads to pandemics and epidemics, which, in turn, harm us; how the (...)
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  18. Afterword: an animal hermeneutics? Research directions and teaching ideas.Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  19. From jumping viruses to Job's leviathan: a response.William P. Brown - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  20. Biblical and other cultural zoontologies.Robert McKay - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  21. Job and the maggots.Suzanna R. Millar - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  22. Miss Piggy and the Pretty Woman of Proverbs 11:22: beauty, animality, and gender.Anne Létourneau - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  23. The donkey as Tamasoaalii: a Fāgogo reading of Balaam and the donkey in Numbers 22:22-35.Brian Fiu Kolia - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  24. The pasture and the battlefield: domesticated animals in the Song of Songs.Jared Beverly - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  25. Mark's parabolic aviary: reading Mark's parabolic birds ecologically with and against Mark's Jesus.Brian James Tipton - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  26. Human obligation to nonhuman animals in Proverbs.Timothy J. Sandoval - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  27. Like dogs that return to their own vomit: ruminations on the (re)production of animalizing hate in the second letter of Peter.Dong Hyeon Jeong - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  28. Recognizing the gen(i)us of animals: Jeremiah 8-9 as a test case.Jaime L. Waters - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  29. Attending to the forest and its denizens in the Hebrew Bible.Margaret Cohen - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  30. Biblical studies meets the humane society: the emergence of animal activist exegesis.Michael J. Gilmour - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  31. The fate of humans and the fate of animals is the same": animality and humanity in Qoheleth and the Hebrew Bible.Ken Stone - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  32. Let them eat straw": an ecological reevaluation of Isaiah 11:6-8.Jacob R. Evers - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  33. He differed in nothing from the beasts": the disruption of the human-animal difference in John Calvin's commentary on Daniel 4.Peter Joshua Atkins - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  34. Monsters, beasts, and animals: the taxonomy of fierce creatureliness in the biblical text and beyond.Robert Paul Seesengood - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  35. Wild Christology: on foxes, birds, and the Son of Man.William "Chip" Gruen - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  36. Introduction: difference, identity, indistinction.Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.), Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
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  37. Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic.Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar (eds.) - 2024 - Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
    Birds, beasts, and creeping things swarm throughout the Bible's pages. Despite their prevalence, most biblical scholars have viewed them merely as metaphors, passive objects, or background embellishment to the human experience. This collection seeks to move beyond this traditional view of biblical animals by engaging the growing interdisciplinary field of animal studies. Contributors Peter Joshua Atkins, Jared Beverly, William P. Brown, Margaret Cohen, Jacob R. Evers, Michael J. Gilmour, William "Chip" Gruen, Dong Hyeon Jeong, Brian Fiu Kolia, Anne Létourneau, Robert (...)
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  38. (1 other version)Animal rights.Mark Rowlands - 2025 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    Short, reader-friendly overview of the contenious moral issue of animal rights.
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  39. The Lennie Small paradox : loving animals to death.Michael D. Briscoe - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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  40. A time to kill : cruelty and compassion with companion animals and urban wildlife.Stephen L. Muzzatti & Kirsten L. Grieve - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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  41. Embodying non-speciesism through altered states of consciousness.Cindy Brooks Dollar - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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  42. If I broke down the wall of flesh :" blurring the human/animal distinction in the slaughterhouse through Ivano Ferrari's poetry.Chiara Stefanoni - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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  43. Inside the Spanish zoological park industry : worker insights on human-animal relationships and shared vulnerabilities.Olatz Aranceta-Reboredo & Júlia Castellano - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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  44. Which animals did Noah eat? An animal-centric focus on food crime.Matthew Robinson - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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  45. They have literally given up on life;" A review of the experiences of nonhuman animals subject to reproductive violence and coercion on factory and puppy farms.Stacy Banwell & John Walliss - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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  46. Non-human animals as property : what this means when companion animals are stolen.Daniel Allen & Tanya Wyatt - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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  47. Horseracing as regulated cruelty : a nonhuman animal victimology perspective.Melanie Flynn & Angus Nurse - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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  48. Following the cultural traces of normalized and legitimized violence by Israeli kosher slaughterers toward nonhuman animals.Anat Ben Yonatan - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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  49. Selfie safaris : the violence of contemporary camera hunting & trophy shot selfies.Corina Medley - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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  50. Reexamining the meatpacking-methamphetamine hypothesis.Cindy Brooks Dollar & Josh Hendrix - 2024 - In Gwen Hunnicutt, Richard Twine & Kenneth Mentor (eds.), Violence and harm in the animal industrial complex: human-animal entanglements. New York: Routledge.
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