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Weighing animal welfare: comparing well-being across species

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eBook

Fischer, Bob

Oxford University Press

2024

1 vol.

9780197745793

E-06-B-00-[Open access]

Bien-être animal ; Spécisme ; Émotion ; Éthique ; Performance zootechnique ; Bonne pratique d'élevage ; Élevage ; One welfare

When, if ever, is it better to spend money to improve pig welfare over chicken welfare? Which species of fish is worst off in commercial aquaculture operations? When, if ever, would humans benefit less from a policy than animals stand to lose? The answers to these questions involve making interspecies welfare comparisons—assessments of how well or poorly the members of one species are faring compared to the members of another species. It's important to answer these questions, as governments, NGOs, and private actors regularly make decisions that assume particular views about them. However, there is no accepted method for making interspecies welfare comparisons; welfare assessment tools are designed to make comparisons within species, not across them. This volume addresses this crucial gap in the literature: it proposes a methodology for making such comparisons, it puts that methodology into practice, and then reports some tentative, proof-of-concept results. This book reports the results of a collaborative, 20-month, interdisciplinary project on making interspecies welfare comparisons. It includes contributions from philosophers, neuroscientists, comparative psychologists, animal welfare scientists, and many others. Unlike many edited volumes, this book is the product of a joint enterprise with a specific, shared goal: to develop a way to make principled comparisons between courses of action that affect different kinds of animals. This book reflects the contributors' collective view about one way to achieve that goal.

Url / Doi : https://doi-org.vet-alfort.idm.oclc.org/10.1093/9780197745793.001.0001

Localisation : Oxford Scholarship Online

Type de fond : Fonds dématérialisé

1 Introduction
2 Defining Welfare Ranges
3 Are All Welfare Ranges the Same?
4 The (Un)Reliability of Intuitions
5 Using Neuron Counts to Estimate Welfare Ranges
6 Differences in the Intensity of Valenced Experience across Species
7 A Methodology for Estimating Differences in Welfare Ranges
8 Some Tentative Welfare Range Estimates
9 Objections, Recommendations, and Conclusions

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