Animals Property & The Law

Front Cover
Temple University Press, 2012 M06 20 - 368 pages

"Pain is pain, irrespective of the race, sex, or species of the victim," states William Kunstler in his foreword. This moral concern for the suffering of animals and their legal status is the basis for Gary L. Francione's profound book, which asks, Why has the law failed to protect animals from exploitation?

Francione argues that the current legal standard of animal welfare does not and cannot establish fights for animals. As long as they are viewed as property, animals will be subject to suffering for the social and economic benefit of human beings.

Exploring every facet of this heated issue, Francione discusses the history of the treatment of animals, anticruelty statutes, vivisection, the Federal Animal Welfare Act, and specific cases such as the controversial injury of anaesthetized baboons at the University of Pennsylvania. He thoroughly documents the paradoxical gap between our professed concern with humane treatment of animals and the overriding practice of abuse permitted by U.S. law.

 

Contents

Legal Welfarism The Consequences of the Property Status of Animals
3
The Status of Animals as Property
15
A General Application of the Theory Anticruelty Statutes
117
A Specific Application of the Theory The Regulation of Animal Experimentation
163
An Alternative to Legal Welfarism?
253
Explanation of Legal Citations
265
Notes
269
Selected Bibliography
331
Index
345
Copyright

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About the author (2012)

Gary L. Francione is Professor of Law and Nicholas de B. Katzenbach Scholar of Law at Rutgers University Law School, Newark. He is also Co-director of the Rutgers Animal Rights Law Center.

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