Confronting animal abuse : law, criminology, and human-animal relationships
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Confronting animal abuse : law, criminology, and human-animal relationships
Rowman & Littlefield, c2009
- : cloth
Available at 3 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 207-226) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Confronting Animal Abuse presents a powerful examination of the human-animal relationship and the laws designed to protect it. Piers Beirne, a leading scholar in the growing field of green criminology, explores the heated topic of animal abuse in agriculture, science, and sport, as well as what is known, if anything, about the potential for animal assault to lead to inter-human violence. He convincingly shows how from its roots in the Irish plow-fields of 1635 through today, animal-rights legislation has been primarily shaped by human interest and why we must reconsider the terms of human-animal relationships. Beirne argues that if violations of animals' rights are to be taken seriously, then scholars and activists should examine why some harms to animals are defined as criminal, others as abusive but not criminal and still others as neither criminal nor abusive. Confronting Animal Abuse points to the need for a more inclusive concept of harms to animals, without which the meaning of animal abuse will be overwhelmingly confined to those harms that are regarded as socially unacceptable, one-on-one cases of animal cruelty. Certainly, those cases demand attention. But so, too, do those other and far more numerous institutionalized harms to animals, where abuse is routine, invisible, ubiquitous and often defined as socially acceptable. In this pioneering, pro-animal book Beirne identifies flaws in our traditional understanding of human-animal relationships, and proposes a compelling new approach.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1 Against Cruelty? The Act Against Plowing by the Tayle
Chapter 2 The Prosecution of Animal Cruelty in Puritan Massachusetts, 1636-1683
Chapter 3 Towards a Sociology of Animal Sexual Assault
Chapter 4 Horse Maiming and the Sport of Kings
Chapter 5 Is There a Progression from Animal Abuse to Interhuman Violence?
Epilogue
by "Nielsen BookData"