How did the use of police dogs affect the American civil rights movement? This paper argues that police dogs during the movement furthered the protesters’ cause through violent conflicts between law enforcement and protesters. The use of police dogs during this movement characterized the interconnected historical struggle between African Americans and the white supremacist status quo represented by law enforcement. While initially serving as tools for law enforcement to fight crime, police dogs became brutal symbols of the status quo’s power against the protesters. However, instead of ceding to the status quo, protestors embraced a form of martyrdom to continue their fight for equality. Through these acts, the movement transformed the dogs ...
Historians have largely neglected the animal protection movement, despite its unique accomplishments...
This paper explores the canine experience in the American Expeditionary Forces (A.E.F.) in an attemp...
Non-human animals face significant risks in meteorological, geological, technological, and terrorist...
How did the use of police dogs affect the American civil rights movement? This paper argues that pol...
The use of dogs as tools of oppression against African Americans has its roots in slavery and persis...
This thesis examines multiple understandings of animals and their oppression, foregrounding black-au...
The carceral state has used non–human animals as tools to oppress Black, Indigenous, and People of t...
The lash and shackles remain two primary symbols of material degradation fixed in the historical mem...
Throughout American history, animals have been used by those in power to harm and terrorize Black Am...
This article discusses critical comparisons between the human and nonhuman abolitionist movements in...
In the past several years, the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania has seen two canine police dogs (K-9...
This article analyzes the introduction of police dogs in early twentieth-century Paris, which formed...
“This essay will explore the different appearances of dogs in Stowe’s novel in order to suss out the...
The relationship between man and dog is one characterized by companionship, service, and love; but d...
Police officers kill approximately 10,000 dogs every year in the United States, according to an esti...
Historians have largely neglected the animal protection movement, despite its unique accomplishments...
This paper explores the canine experience in the American Expeditionary Forces (A.E.F.) in an attemp...
Non-human animals face significant risks in meteorological, geological, technological, and terrorist...
How did the use of police dogs affect the American civil rights movement? This paper argues that pol...
The use of dogs as tools of oppression against African Americans has its roots in slavery and persis...
This thesis examines multiple understandings of animals and their oppression, foregrounding black-au...
The carceral state has used non–human animals as tools to oppress Black, Indigenous, and People of t...
The lash and shackles remain two primary symbols of material degradation fixed in the historical mem...
Throughout American history, animals have been used by those in power to harm and terrorize Black Am...
This article discusses critical comparisons between the human and nonhuman abolitionist movements in...
In the past several years, the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania has seen two canine police dogs (K-9...
This article analyzes the introduction of police dogs in early twentieth-century Paris, which formed...
“This essay will explore the different appearances of dogs in Stowe’s novel in order to suss out the...
The relationship between man and dog is one characterized by companionship, service, and love; but d...
Police officers kill approximately 10,000 dogs every year in the United States, according to an esti...
Historians have largely neglected the animal protection movement, despite its unique accomplishments...
This paper explores the canine experience in the American Expeditionary Forces (A.E.F.) in an attemp...
Non-human animals face significant risks in meteorological, geological, technological, and terrorist...