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Developed by the UK Farm Animal Welfare Council (1965, revised 1993):

| Industry | Welfare concerns | Rights position | |----------|----------------|------------------| | Factory farming | Confinement (battery cages, gestation crates); mutilations (debeaking, tail docking); transport and slaughter stress | All use is exploitation; no humane slaughter. | | Animal testing | Pain, distress, forced breeding, euthanasia after tests | No testing, regardless of potential human benefit. | | Entertainment (zoos, circuses, racing) | Captivity stress, unnatural environments, training with aversives | Ban all captivity; no shows, races, or exhibitions. | | Companion animals | Overbreeding, puppy mills, neglect | Controversial: some rights advocates oppose any ownership, even of pets. | | Wildlife | Hunting, trapping, habitat destruction | Non-interference; no killing or captivity. | Developed by the UK Farm Animal Welfare Council


| Country | Law / Provision | Significance | |---------|----------------|---------------| | Germany (2002) | Basic Law Article 20a | "Animals" added to constitutional protection (alongside environment). | | Switzerland (1992/2008) | Animal protection laws | Lawyer required for animal abuse cases; social animals must have companions; must be able to see daylight. | | France (2015, 2021) | Civil Code amendments | Animals declared "living beings gifted with sentience" (不再 strictly property). | | UK (2006, 2021) | Animal Welfare Act, Animal Sentience Act | Duty of care; formally recognizes sentience. | | India (1960, 2013) | Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act; 2013 dolphin ban | Bans dolphin captivity as "non-human persons." | | Spain (2022) | Civil Code reform | Animals recognized as sentient beings, not objects. | | New Zealand (1999, 2015) | Animal Welfare Act | Great apes used in research prohibited; animal sentience recognized. | | Country | Law / Provision | Significance

  • Scientific Measurement: Welfare relies on veterinary science, ethology (animal behavior), and stress physiology (cortisol levels, heart rate).
  • Legislative Reform: Welfare groups lobby for larger cages, painkillers for slaughter, and enriched environments.
  • | Year | Event / Work | Significance | |------|--------------|---------------| | 1641 | Massachusetts Body of Liberties | First American law protecting animals from "Tyranny or Crueltie." | | 1780 | Jeremy Bentham: Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation | "The question is not, Can they reason? nor, Can they talk? but, Can they suffer?" | | 1822 | Martin's Act (UK) | First major animal protection law (cattle, horses, sheep). | | 1824 | RSPCA founded | First animal welfare charity. | | 1866 | ASPCA founded (USA) | American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. | | 1892 | Henry Salt: Animals' Rights | First book to explicitly argue for animal rights. | | 1965 | Brambell Report (UK) | Led to Five Freedoms; factory farming scrutiny. | | 1975 | Peter Singer: Animal Liberation | Modern animal rights movement (utilitarian foundation). | | 1983 | Tom Regan: The Case for Animal Rights | Deontological rights-based argument. | | 1995 | Gary Francione: Animals, Property, and the Law | Abolitionist animal rights theory. | Can they reason? nor