Animal law

Animal rights
Olive baboon1.jpg

Notable activists
Greg Avery • David Barbarash
Mel Broughton • Rod Coronado
Barry Horne • Ronnie Lee
Keith Mann • Ingrid Newkirk
Heather Nicholson • Jill Phipps
Craig Rosebraugh • Henry Spira
Andrew Tyler • Jerry Vlasak
Paul Watson • Robin Webb

Notable writers
Carol Adams • Jeremy Bentham
Steven Best • Stephen Clark
Gary Francione • Gill Langley
Mary Midgley • Tom Regan
Bernard Rollin • Richard Ryder
Henry Salt • Peter Singer
Steven Wise • Roger Yates

Notable groups/campaigns
List of animal rights groups
Animal Aid • ALDF • ALF • BUAV
GAP • Hunt Saboteurs • PETA • PCRM
Sea Shepherd • SPEAK • SHAC

Issues
Animal liberation movement
Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act
Animal law • Animal testing
Bile bear • Blood sport
Covance • Draize test
Factory farming • Fur trade
Great Ape research ban • HLS
Lab animal sources • LD50
Meat • Nafovanny • Open rescue
Operation Backfire • Primate trade
Seal hunting • Speciesism

Cases
Britches • Brown Dog affair
Cambridge • Pit of despair
Silver Spring monkeys
Unnecessary Fuss

Films
Animal rights films
Behind the Mask • Earthlings
The Animals Film
Peaceable Kingdom • Unnecessary Fuss

Books and magazines
Animal rights books
Animal rights magazines
Animal Liberation
Arkangel • Bite Back
No Compromise

Related categories
ALF • Animal testing
Animal law • Animal rights
AR movement
Livestock • Meat
Poultry

Related templates
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Animal law is a combination of statutory and case law in which the nature – legal, social or biological – of nonhuman animals is an important factor. Animal law encompasses companion animals, wildlife, animals used in entertainment and animals raised for food and research. The emerging field of animal law is often analogized to the environmental law movement 30 years ago. The Animal Legal Defense Fund was founded by attorney Joyce Tischler in 1979 as the first organization dedicated to promoting the field of animal law and using the law to protect the lives and defend the interests of animals.[1]

Animal law has been taught in at least 108 law schools in the U.S., including Harvard, Stanford, UCLA, Northwestern, University of Michigan and Duke and is currently taught in at least 106 schools.[2][3] Animal law is also currently taught in 7 law schools in Canada. [4] In the U.S. there are Student Animal Legal Defense Fund (SALDF) chapters in 132 universities, with an additional seven chapters in Canada. SALDF chapters are student groups that are affiliated with the Animal Legal Defense Fund and share its mission to protect the lives and advance the interests of animals through the legal system.[5]

A growing number of state and local bar associations now have animal law committees.[6] There is very little pro-animal legal precedent in existence, so each case presents an opportunity to change the legal future for animals.[7]

Animal law issues encompass a broad spectrum of approaches—from philosophical explorations of the rights of animals to pragmatic discussions about the rights of those who use animals, who has standing to sue when an animal is harmed in a way that violates the law, and what constitutes legal cruelty.[6] Animal law permeates and affects most traditional areas of the law – including tort, contract, criminal and constitutional law. Examples of this intersection include:

  • Animal custody disputes in divorce or separations.[8]
  • Veterinary malpractice cases.
  • Housing disputes involving “no pets” policies and discrimination laws.
  • Damages cases involving the wrongful death or injury to a companion animal.[9]
  • Enforceable trusts for companion being adopted by states across the country.[10]
  • Criminal law encompassing domestic violence and anti-cruelty laws.

The comprehensive animal law casebook is[11], co-authored by Sonia S. Waisman, Bruce A. Wagman, and Pamela D. Frasch. Because animal law is not a traditional legal field, most of the book’s chapters are framed in terms of familiar subsets of law such as tort, contract, criminal and constitutional law. Each chapter sets out cases and commentary where animal law affects those broader areas.

The Animal Protection Laws of the United States of America & Canada compendium[12], by Stephan K. Otto, Director of Legislative Affairs for the Animal Legal Defense Fund, is a comprehensive animal protection laws collection. It contains a detailed survey of the general animal protection and related statutes for all of the states, principal districts and territories of the United States of America, and for all of Canada; along with full-text versions of each jurisdiction’s laws.


Contents

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.aldf.org
  2. ^ "Animal law courses", Animal Legal Defense Fund.
  3. ^ "Animal Law Courses", National Association for Biomedical Research - Animal Law Section.
  4. ^ "Animal law courses", Animal Legal Defense Fund.
  5. ^ "Student Animal Legal Defense Fund", Animal Legal Defense Fund.
  6. ^ a b Animal Law Program
  7. ^ About The Animal Law Center
  8. ^ "Pet Custody Disputes", National Association for Biomedical Research - Animal Law Section.
  9. ^ "Non-Economic Damages", National Association for Biomedical Research - Animal Law Section.
  10. ^ "Pet Trusts", National Association for Biomedical Research - Animal Law Section.
  11. ^ Animal Law: Cases and Materials, Third Edition
  12. ^ The Animal Protection Laws of the United States of America & Canada — Fourth Edition


Bibliography

External links

International Animal Law, with a Concentration on Latin America, Asia, and Africa
Progress in Animal Legislation: Measurement and Assessment


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