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Animals, politics and morality

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This is an extensively re-written, comprehensive and up-to-date second edition of a well-regarded and much cited text on the politics and philosophy of animal protection.
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  • 09 December 2004
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How do we treat animals? How ought we to treat them? These are the two central questions tackled in the extensively re-written and up dated second edition of this well-regarded and much-cited text. It remains the only book which combines in a single volume, not only a concise and accessible account of the on going debate about animals in moral and legal philosophy, but also a detailed analysis of how this debate is central to an understanding of the ways in which animals are treated.

In the last decade in Britain, we have witnessed major campaigns and public controversy over the export of live animals, and the use of animals in research. Major campaigns have been mounted against companies such as Shamrock and Huntingdon Life Sciences. The impact of genetic engineering on the welfare of animals has also emerged as an important area of concern. In addition, the controversy over hunting has become even more pronounced, with the launch of the pro-hunting Countryside Alliance.

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Price: £19.99
Pages: 296
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Issues in Environmental Politics
Publication Date: 09 December 2004
ISBN: 9780719066214
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Environmental Policy, Politics and government, NATURE / Animal Rights, The environment, Animals and society

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Robert Garner is Reader in Politics at the University of Leicester

Introduction
1. Animal ethics
2. Radicalism and revival; the animal protection movement since the 1970s
3. Captives, companions and the law
4. Animal agriculture
5. Animals, medical science and consumer protection
6. Wildlife conservation
7. Animal protection and public policy
8. Animal liberation and direct action
Conclusion