The first International Conference on Veterinary and Animal
Ethics (ICVAE) held in September 2011 saw leading experts from
across the world come together to discuss the most important issues
of animal welfare in contemporary veterinary practice and research.
This is the extended proceedings of that conference, enabling all
those interested in this increasingly significant subject to
benefit from the insights of those discussions.
The conference was divided into four sessions: Principles of
veterinary and animal ethics; Justifying ends – the morality of
animal use; Ethical analyses of animal use; and Cultural,
political, legal and economic considerations. Each session
contained four or five papers, and these are presented here in
full, as well as the transcribed question and answer sessions at
the end of each paper, and a short post-presentation reflection
from each author. Also included is the debate on the motion
'Is it better to have lived and lost than never to have lived
at all?’ which records three prepared responses to the
question as well as registrants’ comments from the floor.
KEY FEATURES
* Contributions from the leading thinkers in veterinary
and animal ethics today
* Includes stimulating, challenging, thought-provoking and
sometimes controversial discussions
* Addresses key questions on the role of the veterinarian and
the morality of animal use, as well as our impact on wildlife
* Provides guidance on the practical application of ethical
principles and the problems encountered
Published as part of the UFAW Animal Welfare book series.
See href=’http://www.wiley.com/go/ufaw’>www.wiley.com/go/ufaw for
more details.
Spis treści
Contributors vii
Foreword by John Webster x
Preface xiii
Session I Principles of Veterinary and Animal Ethics
1
Patrick Bateson
1 The History of Veterinary Ethics in Britain, ca.
1870-2000 3
Abigail Woods
2 The Idea of Animal Welfare – Developments and Tensions
19
Peter Sandøe and Karsten Klint Jensen
3 Lessons from Medical Ethics 32
Carolyn Johnston
4 Veterinary Ethics, Professionalism and Society 44
Stephen A. May
Session II Justifying Ends – The Morality of Animal Use
59
Judy Mac Arthur Clark
5 Justice of Animal Use in the Veterinary Profession 63
Martin C. Whiting
6 Telos 75
Bernard E. Rollin
7 Agriculture, Animal Welfare and Climate Change 84
Steven P. Mc Culloch
8 Ethics and Ethical Analysis in Veterinary Science: The
Development and Application of the Ethical Matrix Method 100
Kate Millar
9 The Ethics of Animal Enhancement 113
James Yeates
Session III Ethical Analyses of Animal Use 133
Peter Jinman
10 Wildlife Medicine, Conservation and Welfare 135
James K. Kirkwood
11 Veterinary Ethics and the Use of Animals in Research: Are
They Compatible? 155
Colin Gilbert and Sarah Wolfensohn
12 Production Animals: Ethical and Welfare Issues Raised by
Production-focused Management of Newborn Livestock 174
David J. Mellor
13 Companion Animals 188
Sandra A. Corr
14 Ethical Analysis of the Use of Animals for Sport 201
Madeleine Campbell
Session IV Cultural, Political, Legal and Economic
Considerations 217
John Webster
15 Global Cultural Considerations of Animal Ethics 219
Michael C. Appleby
16 Animal Ethics and the Government’s Policy: 'To
Guard and Protect’ 229
Sophia Hepple and Nigel Gibbens
17 Veterinary Ethics and Law 245
Marie Fox
18 Ethical Citizenship 261
Björn Forkman
19 Principles, Preference and Profit: Animal Ethics in a Market
Economy 271
John Mc Inerney
Debate: 'Is It Better to Have Lived and Lost than Never to
Have Lived at All?’ 286
Patrick Bateson
Index 300
O autorze
Christopher Wathes, Professor of Animal Welfare at the Royal Veterinary College.
Sandra Corr, Clinical Reader in Small Animal Surgery at the University of Nottingham.
Stephen May, Deputy Principal and Vice Principal for Teaching at the Royal Veterinary College.
Steven Mc Culloch, veterinary surgeon and Ph D student at the Royal Veterinary College.
Martin Whiting, veterinary surgeon and Ph D student at the Royal Veterinary College.