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Do Animals Have Rights? is a 2005 non-fiction book on animal rights by British philosopher Alison Hills from the University of Bristol. The book explores the ethics of factory farming, animal experimentation and other issues involving animals from a philosophical analysis.[1]

Quick Facts Author, Language ...
Do Animals Have Rights?
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AuthorAlison Hills
LanguageEnglish
SubjectsAnimal rights
PublisherIcon Books, Totem Books
Publication date
2005
Media typeHardback, paperback
Pages247
ISBN978-1840466232
OCLC760651191
179.3
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Hills authored the book as an accessible examination of the ethical issues regarding the human use of animals. The book goes beyond the rights argument and delves into the moral issues and how they might be resolved. The book has chapters on the history of animal protection legislation, animal consciousness, human relationships with animals and case studies on factory farming, fox hunting, science and suffering and pets.[2]

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Reception

It was positively reviewed by Benjamin Hale as "carv[ing] a centre path between the so‐called ‘extreme’ animal rights view and the view which sees no merit in the claim that animals have rights".[1]

Peter D Thornton in a review for the journal Laboratory Animals commented that "this book can be read by anyone with an interest in animal use issues and human–animal interactions. I would particularly recommend it for those normally put off by the more traditional and stuffy (and usually overly tortuous) texts on the subject and by those who want exposure to a different viewpoint offered by the likes of Singer, Rollin or Regan."[2]

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References

Further reading

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