In October, 2011, Terry Thompson committed suicide by gunshot after cutting open the cages of fifty-six exotic animals on his farm in Zanesville, Ohio. Fearing for pub-lic safety, law enforcement officers systematically hunted down the escaped animals in an episode that garnered international attention and prompted renewed discus-sion of the propriety of exotic animal ownership. This Article retells and discusses the circumstances surrounding Terry Thompson’s unhinging, applying frameworks of legal theory, chiefly in the realm of property law, to assess the fabric that held Thompson’s delicate system together and the tensions that led to its unravelling. As an autopsy, the article documents the systems that failed in theoretical and specifi...
A movement of activist ‘animal lawyers’ has recently arrived in Australia. This article contends tha...
For most of recorded history, the majority of legal systems have regarded domesticated animals as a ...
Acts of animals kept as pets or as part of the farm enterprise may subject the owner to legal liabil...
In October, 2011, Terry Thompson committed suicide by gunshot after cutting open the cages of fifty-...
The article begins by identifying the changes in US law regarding the treatment of enslaved people a...
The concern for the wellbeing and humane treatment of animals continues to grow in the United States...
Nonhuman animals are currently treated as property under U.S. and Australian law, leaving them open ...
With an annual profit between $10 and $20 billion, animal smuggling has become the third largest ill...
This article first discusses the domestication of companion animals, including the impact of anthrop...
This Article compares the laws and regulations that govern the termination of life in several contex...
The most abused beings in the United States are those whom we raise and kill for food. The numbers o...
Nonhuman animals are currently treated as property under U.S. and Australian law, leaving them open ...
In the 1960s, LIFE was America\u27s single most important general weekly magazine, its photo-essay f...
In this Article, Professor Livingston examines the history and philosophy of animal cruelty laws and...
Everyone reading this Article is doubtless aware of the woeful lack of legal protection for farm ani...
A movement of activist ‘animal lawyers’ has recently arrived in Australia. This article contends tha...
For most of recorded history, the majority of legal systems have regarded domesticated animals as a ...
Acts of animals kept as pets or as part of the farm enterprise may subject the owner to legal liabil...
In October, 2011, Terry Thompson committed suicide by gunshot after cutting open the cages of fifty-...
The article begins by identifying the changes in US law regarding the treatment of enslaved people a...
The concern for the wellbeing and humane treatment of animals continues to grow in the United States...
Nonhuman animals are currently treated as property under U.S. and Australian law, leaving them open ...
With an annual profit between $10 and $20 billion, animal smuggling has become the third largest ill...
This article first discusses the domestication of companion animals, including the impact of anthrop...
This Article compares the laws and regulations that govern the termination of life in several contex...
The most abused beings in the United States are those whom we raise and kill for food. The numbers o...
Nonhuman animals are currently treated as property under U.S. and Australian law, leaving them open ...
In the 1960s, LIFE was America\u27s single most important general weekly magazine, its photo-essay f...
In this Article, Professor Livingston examines the history and philosophy of animal cruelty laws and...
Everyone reading this Article is doubtless aware of the woeful lack of legal protection for farm ani...
A movement of activist ‘animal lawyers’ has recently arrived in Australia. This article contends tha...
For most of recorded history, the majority of legal systems have regarded domesticated animals as a ...
Acts of animals kept as pets or as part of the farm enterprise may subject the owner to legal liabil...