ANIMAL WELFARE (1) Flashcards

1
Q

history recap

A
  1. Bible: donkey shall not have to plow by an ox
  2. Thomas Wenworth (1635): first legislation (against plowing by the tail)
  3. Jeans-Jacques Rousseau discourse on equality (how we treat them should be based on how they feel not reason ex. human babies)
  4. 4 stages of cruelty (william Hogarth): baby behaviour to animals, leads to bad behaviour to others, leads to bad behaviour to yourself
  5. Various contempary recreations (running of bulls, cock-fighting, etc.)
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1
Q

setting the scence (1945)

A

-end of WWII
-intensification of animal production as a way to provide food security

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2
Q

setting the scene (1965)

A

-Brambell committee (UK)
-conclude animals should be afforded the Five Freedoms

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3
Q

setting the scene (1994)

A

-new approach (David Mellor) focusing on the POSITIVE experiences rather than only avoiding the bad ones
*five domains

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4
Q

goals of animal production over the years

A
  1. Subsistence
  2. Consumption
  3. Positive social, environmental and economic impact
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5
Q

5 freedoms framework

A
  1. Freedom from thirst, hunger and malnutrition
  2. Freedom from discomfort and exposure
  3. Freedom from pain, injury and disease
  4. Freedom from fear and distress
  5. Freedom to express normal behaviour
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6
Q

freedom from thirst, hunger and malnutrition

A

-readily access to fresh water
-diet to maintain full health and vigour

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7
Q

freedom from discomfort and exposure

A

-appropriate environment (shelter and comfortable resting area)

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8
Q

freedom from pain, injury and disease

A

-prevention or rapid diagnosis or treatment

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9
Q

freedom from fear and distress

A

-ensuring conditions and treatment which avoid mental suffering

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10
Q

freedom to express normal behaviour

A

-provide sufficient space
-proper facilities
-company of animals own kind

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11
Q

weaknesses of five freedoms

A

-as principles, they are unsound and illogical
-doesn’t provide a convincing basis for animal welfare assessment and management

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12
Q

5 domains

A
  1. Nutrition
  2. Environment
  3. Health
  4. Behaviour
  5. Mental state
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13
Q

nutrition

A

-balanced and varied diet

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14
Q

environment

A

-comfortable and pleasant

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15
Q

health

A

-fit and uninjured

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16
Q

behaviour

A

-calm, social, playful, pleased

17
Q

mental state

A

-able to express rewarding behaviour

18
Q

quality of life

A
  1. A good life
  2. A life worth living
  3. A life not worth living
19
Q

definition of animal welfare

A

-physical and mental state of an animal in relation to the conditions in which it lives or dies

20
Q

good welfare

A

If it is:
-healthy
-comfortable
-well nourished
-safe
-able to express innate behaviour

If it is not:
-suffering from unpleasant states (pain, fear, discomfort)

21
Q

approaches to address animal welfare

A
  1. Biological functioning approach
  2. Natural living approach
  3. A feelings based approach
    *should have all 3 elements
22
Q

biological functioning approach

A

-capable of normal growth and reproduction
-reasonably free form disease, injury, malnutrition and abnormalities of behaviuor and physiology

23
Q

natural living approach

A

-kept in reasonably natural environments
-allowed to develop and use their nature adaptation and capabilities

24
Q

feelings based approach

A

-affective states are key to quality of life
-high level of welfare=animals experience comfort, contentment and pleasure

25
Q

a wicked problem

A

-can’t be solved, only managed thorugh technology development and societal acceptance
-not “true and false”, but “better or worse”
-animal production: same environment can produce very different outcomes
-constraints and resources change over time
-stakeholders have radically different frames of reference about the problem

26
Q

natural welfare

A

-live in wild
-need to find food/water

27
Q

maximal welfare

A

-animals in our care
-food, diet, reasonable environment

28
Q

minimal welfare

A

-when maximizing economic output and reducing amount given/spent on animals

29
Q

desired/appropriate welfare

A

-between maximal and minimal welfare

30
Q

ethics

A

-guidelines from society (group)
Ex. code of practice, vet oath

31
Q

morals

A

-own personal decision
-influenced by own experience, culture and traditions

32
Q

animal ethics

A

-field of ethics
-deals with how and why we should take nonhuman animals into account in our moral decisions
Ex. duty to animals and duty to stakeholders

33
Q

Vet oath

A

“I will strive to promote animal health and welfare”
“prevent and relieve animal suffering”

34
Q

ethical dilemma

A

-decision-making problem between two or more possible courses of action, none of which is unambiguously preferable

35
Q

contractarian view

A

-human society works thanks to moral agreements between people
-animals can’t participate in these agreements, we may have indirect ethical obligations towards animals b/c they matter to other humans
Ex. consumers will care
*could be used to justify anything that someone agreees with (ex. slavery, inequalities)

36
Q

utilitarian view

A

-activities which have adverse impact on well-being of animals may be justified if they lead to net increase in well-being (for humans or animals)
Ex. animal research, killing animals for food if they were in good conditions
*linked to subjective cos-benefit analysis

37
Q

relational view

A

-our duties to animals depends on if they are close to us or not
*inconsistent, prejudicial and promote stereotypes

38
Q

animal rights view

A

-fixed ethical rules place limits on our treatment of animals, whatever the circumstances
Ex. not used as our slaves or for experiments
*inflexible, underplays consequences (pests), no guidance when managing conflicting rights (rights of predators vs. prey)

39
Q

respect for nature view

A

-we have a duty to protect not just animals but the species to which they belong, ecosystems and habitats
-leave animal the way evolution made them
*subjective definition of natural (was domestication unnatural?)

40
Q
A