The Emergence Of Farm Animal Welfare In Britain, 1964–71
This study is a historical analysis of the animal welfare movement in Britain from 1964-1971. This article details how “animal welfare” was defined and how it came under the purview of government regulation.
Article Abstract:
“There is a long history of concern in Britain for how animals are treated. Until the 1960s, these concerns were expressed largely in terms of cruelty or suffering, which was prevented through various acts of Parliament. Over the period 1964–71, amidst public debates about intensive farming, a new discourse of animal welfare emerged. To understand what welfare meant and how it became established as a term, a concept and a target of government regulation, it is necessary to examine farming politics and practices, the existing tradition of animal protection and attempts to rethink the nature of animal suffering.”
Highlights
- “The emergence of animal welfare as a term, concept and target of state regulation.”
- “Its relationship to the rise of intensive farming.”
- “Its relationship to the longer tradition of preventing animal cruelty.”
- “How different interest groups defined and evaluated welfare.”
- “The adoption of new methods for its governance.”