Rain Without Thunder: The Ideology of the Animal Rights Movement

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Temple University Press, 17 jun 2010 - 288 páginas

Are "animal welfare" supporters indistinguishable from the animal exploiters they oppose? Do reformist measures reaffirm the underlying principles that make animal exploitation possible in the first place? In this provocative book, Gary L. Francione argues that the modern animal rights movement has become indistinguishable from a century-old concern with the welfare of animals that in no way prevents them from being exploited.

Francione maintains that advocating humane treatment of animals retains a sense of them as instrumental to human ends. When they are considered dispensable property, he says, they are left fundamentally without "rights." Until the seventies, Francione claims, this was the paradigm within which the Animal Rights Movement operated, as demonstrated by laws such as the Federal Humane Slaughter Act of 1958.

In this wide-ranging book, Francione takes the reader through the philosophical and intellectual debates surrounding animal welfare to make clear the difference between animal rights and animal welfare. Through case studies such as campaigns against animal shelters, animal laboratories, and the wearing of fur, Francione demonstrates the selectiveness and confusion inherent in reformist programs that target fur, for example, but leave wool and leather alone.

The solution to this dilemma, Francione argues, is not in a liberal position that espouses the humane treatment of animals, but in a more radical acceptance of the fundamental inalienability of animal rights.

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Animal Rights and Animal Welfare
1
Animal RightsThe Rejection of Instrumentalism
7
The New Welfarists
32
The Philosophical and Historical Origins of New Welfarism
47
The Results of New Welfarism The Animal Confusion Movement
78
The Empirical and Structural Defects of Animal Welfare Theory
110
Is Animal Rights a Utopian Theory?
147
Rights Theory An Incremental Approach
190
Conclusion
220
Marching Backwards
226
Notes
231
Index
265
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Sobre el autor (2010)

Gary L. Francione is Professor of Law and Nicholas de B. Katzenbach Scholar of Law at Rutgers University Law School, Newark. He is the co-director of the Rutgers Animal Rights Law Center and the author of Animals, Property, and the Law (Temple).

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