Ebook {Epub PDF} Why Animals Matter: The Case for Animal Protection by Erin E. Williams






















"Erin Williams and Margo DeMello have written a compact and compelling treatise on how animals suffer in institutional settings and why people of conscience should take note and take action. They have put together an overwhelming case for a new ethic in dealing with animals, and my greatest hope is that it will have a vast readership.".  · And wild animals suffer in other ways - losing their lives as their habitats disappear, being hunted for trophies, and finding themselves removed from their homes for the exotic pet www.doorway.ru Endnotes: Why Animals Matter: The Case for Animal Protection. Why Animals Matter.: Erin E. Williams, Margo DeMello. Prometheus Books, - Nature - pages. 4 Reviews. This is a concise yet complete /5(4).


Why Animals Matter: The Case for Animal Protection by Erin E. Williams Margo DeMello Prometheus Books, The authors examine cruelty to animals on an institutional level in various industries, including the meat industry, hunting, the textile industry, animal experimentation, the pet industry, and animals in entertainment. Why Animals Matter: The Case for Animal Protection offers a concise yet complete overview of the problems of animal suffering, linking them to larger issues of human and environmental exploitation. Authors Erin E. Williams and Margo DeMello examine industries that exploit animals - meat processing companies and agribusinesses; medical. (Excerpted from Why Animals Matter: The Case for Animal Protection, by Erin E. Williams and Margo DeMello). Rabbits who are killed for fur are raised on fur farms. Fur is not, contrary to popular opinion, a byproduct of the meat industry; because rabbits are killed for meat at a younger age than they are for fur, the rabbits who are raised for fur are raised and killed for an entirely.


Why Animals Matter: The Case for Animal Protection Erin E. Williams Margo DeMello Prometheus Books (Aug 9, ) $ (pp) Ten thousand years ago the human connection to animals changed when people began domesticating them for food and labor, establishing dominance and control. The authors also consider the adverse environmental effects of animal exploitation from pollution to deforestation and the depletion of biodiversity. In addition, they look at the connections between the poor treatment of animals and human exploitation of immigrants, slaughterhouse and farm workers, as well as the larger issues of globalization, hunger, and the negative consequences for other nations. And wild animals suffer in other ways - losing their lives as their habitats disappear, being hunted for trophies, and finding themselves removed from their homes for the exotic pet www.doorway.ru

0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000