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- Publication Year
Articles 691 - 706 of 706
Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Definition Of The Concept Of ''Humane Treatment" In Relation To Food And Laboratory Animals, Bernard E. Rollin
Definition Of The Concept Of ''Humane Treatment" In Relation To Food And Laboratory Animals, Bernard E. Rollin
International Journal for the Study of Animal Problems
The very title of this talk makes a suggestion which must be forestalled, namely the idea that laboratory and food animals enjoy some exceptional moral status by virtue of the fact that we use them. In fact, it is extremely difficult to find any morally relevant grounds for distinguishing between food and laboratory animals and other animals and, far more dramatically, between animals and humans. The same conditions which require that we apply moral categories to humans rationally require that we apply them to animals as well. While it is obviously pragmatically impossible in our current sociocultural setting to expect …
Meetings And Announcements
International Journal for the Study of Animal Problems
- Meeting Report - Animals in Research
- Announcement - Abstract exchange
- New APHIS administrator
- Newsletter on the Human-Companion Animal Bond
- Veterinarians for Animal Protection
- New editor for Equine Study Group
- Bibliography of Animal Ethology
Laboratory Animals And Alternatives In The 80'S, Andrew N. Rowan
Laboratory Animals And Alternatives In The 80'S, Andrew N. Rowan
International Journal for the Study of Animal Problems
No abstract provided.
Drugs & Horse Racing
Close Up Reports
HSUS working to end use of drugs at tracks--new bill introduced in House & Senate
The Public Governance Of Science And Research Animal Welfare, T. E. Malone
The Public Governance Of Science And Research Animal Welfare, T. E. Malone
International Journal for the Study of Animal Problems
The following is excerpted from a speech given by Dr. Thomas E. Malone, Deputy Director of the National Institutes of Health, at the 26th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Laboratory Animal Scientists (AALAS), Anaheim, California, October 5, 1977.
Bruises And Carcass Damage, Temple Grandin
Bruises And Carcass Damage, Temple Grandin
International Journal for the Study of Animal Problems
Bruising and carcass damage is a major source of financial loss to slaughterhouses in the United States, approximately $46 million per annum. The absence of easily administered tests to determine where and/or when bruising occurs results in the slaughter plant absorbing carcass damage costs. Rough, abusive handling of livestock accounts for over half of all bruising. Injuries occur through overuse of persuaders, careless transport methods, and faulty equipment. Other elements relevant to carcass loss include branding cattle, abscesses, spreader and crippling injuries, sickness and death during extreme weather conditions, and carcass shrink. The 1979 regulations under the Humane Methods of …
Illegal, Secret Dogfights And Cockfights Rampant In U.S.
Illegal, Secret Dogfights And Cockfights Rampant In U.S.
Close Up Reports
Enforcement is Difficult & Dangerous!
Homeless Cats And Dogs Are Suffering And Dying
Hsus Opposes Cruel Clubbing Of Harp Seal Pups
Food Animals Are Suffering
Close Up Reports
HSUS intensifies campaign to eliminate cruelty on 'factory farms'
Hsus Investigation Leads To Fifty Arrests In Cockfight Raid
Hsus Investigation Leads To Fifty Arrests In Cockfight Raid
Close Up Reports
Participants fined up to $500
Hsus Fights Cruelty In Pounds
Close Up Reports
Unlike privately owned animal shelters, the pound was not instituted for the benefit of the animals.
Hsus Spotlights Circus Cruelty
Hsus Spotlights Circus Cruelty
Close Up Reports
Society has sideshow operator arrested in three states
Struggle To Save Dolphins Continuing
Struggle To Save Dolphins Continuing
Close Up Reports
New House Bill OKs Dolphin Deaths; HSUS Continuing Battle in Senate