This article considers objections to current litigation strategies of the US-based Nonhuman Rights Project (NhRP), which seek to extend legal personhood and liberty rights to nonhuman animals who possess ‘practical autonomy’. By tying personhood to intellectual abilities, so the objections go, such strategies endanger the present legal standing of humans with profound cognitive impairments. This article will argue that such cause for concern is largely misplaced for two reasons. First, the NhRP argue that practical autonomy is only a sufficient condition for personhood, not a necessary one. Second, drawing on theoretical and empirical literature, the article will argue that speciesism itself is a multiplier of oppressive theories, attitudes...
Nonhuman animals are currently treated as property under U.S. and Australian law, leaving them open ...
This article discusses the status of animal rights, and more particularly whether these rights may b...
The present article examines a concern I have had for some time about the compatibility of humanisti...
This article considers objections to current litigation strategies of the US-based Nonhuman Rights P...
This article considers objections to current litigation strategies of the US-based Nonhuman Rights P...
This article considers objections to current litigation strategies of the US-based Nonhuman Rights P...
This Article analyzes whether courts should grant legal personhood to intelligent animal species, su...
Do non-human animals have rights? The answer to this question depends on whether animals have morall...
The Nonhuman Rights Project is challenging the “thinghood” of all nonhuman animals by demanding that...
This article provides an empirically based, interdisciplinary approach to the following two question...
Activists advocating for a better treatment of animals have been using various platforms to promote ...
Activists advocating for a better treatment of animals have been using various platforms to promote ...
Nonhuman Animal rights activists are sometimes dismissed as ‘crazy’ or irrational by countermovemen...
This article considers the legal personhood and dignity of non-human animals. It first argues that t...
Questions concerning (nonhuman) animal rights have been increasingly addressed within the criminolog...
Nonhuman animals are currently treated as property under U.S. and Australian law, leaving them open ...
This article discusses the status of animal rights, and more particularly whether these rights may b...
The present article examines a concern I have had for some time about the compatibility of humanisti...
This article considers objections to current litigation strategies of the US-based Nonhuman Rights P...
This article considers objections to current litigation strategies of the US-based Nonhuman Rights P...
This article considers objections to current litigation strategies of the US-based Nonhuman Rights P...
This Article analyzes whether courts should grant legal personhood to intelligent animal species, su...
Do non-human animals have rights? The answer to this question depends on whether animals have morall...
The Nonhuman Rights Project is challenging the “thinghood” of all nonhuman animals by demanding that...
This article provides an empirically based, interdisciplinary approach to the following two question...
Activists advocating for a better treatment of animals have been using various platforms to promote ...
Activists advocating for a better treatment of animals have been using various platforms to promote ...
Nonhuman Animal rights activists are sometimes dismissed as ‘crazy’ or irrational by countermovemen...
This article considers the legal personhood and dignity of non-human animals. It first argues that t...
Questions concerning (nonhuman) animal rights have been increasingly addressed within the criminolog...
Nonhuman animals are currently treated as property under U.S. and Australian law, leaving them open ...
This article discusses the status of animal rights, and more particularly whether these rights may b...
The present article examines a concern I have had for some time about the compatibility of humanisti...