You have Guest access.
Log In
Richard P. Haynes
i-xxv
Front matter
3-68
Part I / The Science of Laboratory Animal Care and Welfare
3-5
Introduction
7-12
The Roots for the Emerging Science of Animal Welfare in Great Britain
13-35
The Historical Roots of the Science of Laboratory Animal Welfare in the US
37-48
Laboratory Animal Welfare Issues in the US Legislative and Regulatory History
49-56
Mandated Institutional Animal Care and Use Committees
57-65
Do Regulators of Animal Welfare Need to Develop a Theory of Psychological Well-Being?
67-68
Conclusion
71-129
Part II / The Emergence of the Science of Food Animal Welfare Mandated by the Brambell Commission Report
71-77
79-86
Rollin’s Theory of Animal Welfare and Its Ethical Implications
87-95
Duncan and the Inclusion of Subjectivity
97-106
Fraser on Animal Welfare, Science, and Ethics
107-117
Appleby-Sandøe and the Human Welfare Model
119-125
Nordenfelt and Nussbaum on Animal Welfare
127-129
Conclusion to Part II
133-155
Part III / Giving Animals What We Owe Them
133-134
Introduction to Part III
135-142
The Fair Deal Argument
143-149
A General Theory of Our Moral Obligations to Nonhuman Animals
151-155
Conclusion: Competing Conceptions of Animal Welfare
157-162
Back matter
This page requires script.
Frequently asked questions General info on journals and books Send us your feedback Impressum Contact us
© Springer, Part of Springer Science+Business Media Privacy, Disclaimer, Terms & Conditions, and Copyright Info