Animal Rights Law - Chapter 2
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Chapter 2 - Welfarism vs Abolitionism: a Dichotomy?

  1. Introduction
  1. Classic Welfarism
  • For an elaboration of the view that classic welfarism underpins animal protection laws, with a focus on the United States, see: Darian M Ibrahim, ‘The Anticruelty Statute: A Study in Animal Welfare’ (2006) 1 Journal of Animal Law and Ethics 175, available at https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/facpubs/1680/. For a similar argument focused on English law, with comparisons to the United States and New Zealand, see: Lee McConnell, ‘Property Status and the Limited Impact of Welfare Legislation for Farm Animals’ 9 Journal of Animal and Natural Resource Law 63, available at https://www.animallaw.info/policy/journal-animal-and-natural-resource-law-vol-9. For a similar argument focused on Canadian law, see: Maneesha Deckha, ‘No Escape: Anti-Cruelty Laws’ Property Foundations’, Animals as Legal Beings: Contesting Anthropocentric Legal Orders (University of Toronto Press 2021), available at https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.3138/9781487538248-003/html
  • For a legal theoretical supplement to Francione’s critique of how normative legal discourse can minimise and whitewash injustice, see: Richard Delgado, ‘Norms and Normal Science: Toward a Critique of Normativity in Legal Thought’ (1991) 139 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 933, available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/3312376#metadata_info_tab_contents
  1. Abolitionism
  • For an expanded defence by Francione of the view that animals have an interest in living rather than just being treated well, see: Gary L Francione, ‘Equal Consideration and the Interest of Nonhuman Animals in Continued Existence: A Response to Professor Sunstein’ [2006] University of Chicago Legal Forum 231, available at https://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/uclf/vol2006/iss1/8/
  • For a case study of one single-issue campaign (against sow stalls in Australia) that draws on several related fields, including literature on regulation, social movements, co-option, and economics, and which signals both benefits and detriments, see: Rachel Carey, Christine Parker, and Gyorgy Scrinis, ‘How Free Is Sow Stall Free? Incremental Regulatory Reform and Industry Co‐optation of Activism’ (2020) 42 Law & Policy 284, available at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/lapo.12154
  • For an empirical argument that animal welfare measures do not increase the likelihood of animal use diminishing, see: Larkin Ormes, ‘Do Animal Welfare Laws Reduce Animal Product Consumption?’ (Master’s thesis, Harvard University 2022), available at https://dash.harvard.edu/handle/1/37370750
  1. New Welfarism
  • For an argument consistent with these approaches that employs the idea of (thick) rights or personhood as an outcome or consequence of gradual legal improvements, rather than something which needs to be achieved in one categorical jump, see Eva Bernet Kempers, ‘Transition Rather than Revolution: The Gradual Road towards Animal Legal Personhood through the Legislature’ [2022] Transnational Environmental Law 1, available at https://doi.org/10.1017/S2047102522000139. For a similar distinction in the use of legal concepts, namely as ‘reasons’ or ‘conclusions’, see: Visa AJ Kurki, A Theory of Legal Personhood (Oxford University Press 2019) at 195, available at https://global.oup.com/academic/product/a-theory-of-legal-personhood-9780198844037?cc=gb&lang=en&
  • For a conceptual argument against the abolitionist position that animals need a right to not be owned in order to be free, and about what freedom means in this context, see: Andreas T Schmidt, ‘Persons or Property – Freedom and the Legal Status of Animals’ (2018) 15 Journal of Moral Philosophy 20-45, available at https://brill.com/view/journals/jmp/15/1/article-p20_20.xml?language=en
  • For an argument that abolitionism wrongly focuses on whether instrumental use and intrinsic value are compatible rather than the character of human and animal relations, see Katherine Wayne, ‘Permissible Use and Interdependence: Against Principled Veganism: Permissible Use and Interdependence’ (2013) 30 Journal of Applied Philosophy 160-175, available at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/japp.12010
  • For a critique of new welfarism as underappreciating how ownership supports and normalizes oppressive social practices, even if ownership and respect for animal interests are conceptually compatible, see: Jason Wyckoff, ‘Toward Justice for Animals’ (2014) 45 Journal of Social Philosophy 539, available at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/josp.12077. For an expansion on the structural and systemic approach Wyckoff recommends, see: Jason Wyckoff, ‘Analysing Animality: A Critical Approach’ (2015) 65 The Philosophical Quarterly 529, available at https://academic.oup.com/pq/article/65/260/529/1545094
  • For an argument that new welfarism pursues means and ends that are incoherent which draws on critical theory and Continental philosophy, see: Jan-Harm De Villiers, ‘Animal Rights Theory, Animal Welfarism and the “New Welfarist” Amalgamation: A Critical Perspective’ (2017) 30 Southern African Public Law 406-433, available at https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/SAPL/article/view/3587
  1. Beyond the Dichotomy
  • For an argument that moves beyond welfarism and rights as a dichotomy by arguing that the two concepts and their underlying values entail each other and hence are complementary, see: Nibedita Priyadarshini Jena, ‘Animal Welfare and Animal Rights: An Examination of Some Ethical Problems’ (2017) 15 Journal of Academic Ethics 377-395, available at https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10805-017-9282-1
  • For a critique of the welfarism and rights dichotomy as constraining animal law discourse, see: Jessica Eisen, ‘Of Linchpins and Bedrock: Hope, Despair, and Pragmatism in Animal Law’ [2022] University of Toronto Law Journal, available at https://utpjournals.press/doi/10.3138/utlj-2021-0127
  1. Conclusion
  • For an argument in favour of a legal category in between personhood and property that addresses many of the themes in this chapter, see chapters one, three, and five in Sharisse Kanet, ‘Legal Purgatory: Why Some Animals Are Neither Persons nor Property’ (PhD thesis, City University of New York 2021), available at https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/4114/
  • For a detailed comparison of welfare and rights approaches as applied to animal protection law in the United States context, see: Ruth Payne, ‘Animal Welfare, Animal Rights, and the Path to Social Reform: One Movement’s Struggle for Coherency in the Quest for Change’ (2002) 9 Virginia Journal of Social Policy & the Law 587-643, available at https://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/vajsplw9&div=28&id=&page=; for an applied comparison in the context of the Brazilian Federal Constitution, see: Amanda Formisano Paccagnella and Patricia Borba Marchetto, ‘Animal Welfare versus Animal Abolitionism: A Comparison of the Theories by Peter Singer and Tom Regan and Their Influence on the Brazilian Federal Constitution’ (2019) 20 Revista de Direitos e Garantias Fundamentais 251, available at https://sisbib.emnuvens.com.br/direitosegarantias/article/view/1493