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portada Animal Property Rights: A Theory of Habitat Rights for Wild Animals
Type
Physical Book
Language
Inglés
Pages
152
Format
Hardcover
Dimensions
23.1 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm
Weight
0.36 kg.
ISBN13
9780739189252

Animal Property Rights: A Theory of Habitat Rights for Wild Animals

John Hadley (Author) · Lexington Books · Hardcover

Animal Property Rights: A Theory of Habitat Rights for Wild Animals - Hadley, John

New Book

£ 140.77

  • Condition: New
Origin: U.S.A. (Import costs included in the price)
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Synopsis "Animal Property Rights: A Theory of Habitat Rights for Wild Animals"

Animal Property Rights: A Theory of Habitat Rights for Wild Animals represents the first attempt to extend liberal property rights theory across the species barrier to animals. It broadens the traditional focus of animal rights beyond basic rights to life and bodily integrity to rights to the natural areas in which animal reside. John Hadley argues that both proponents of animal rights and environmentalists ought to support animal property rights because protecting habitat promotes ecological values and helps to ensure animals live free from human interference. Hadley's focus is pragmatist - he locates animal property rights within the institution of property as it exists today in liberal democracies. He argues that attempts to justify animal property rights on labor and first occupancy grounds will likely fail; instead, he grounds animal property rights upon the importance of habitat for the satisfaction of animals' basic needs. The potential of animal property rights as a way of reinvigorating existing public policy responses to the problem of biodiversity loss due to habitat destruction is thoroughly explored. Using the concept of guardianship for cognitively impaired human beings, Hadley translates habitat rights as a right to negotiate - human guardians ought to be allowed to negotiate, on behalf of wild animals, with human landholders whose development activities put animals at risk. In addition to a theory of animal property rights, Animal Property Rights affords a critique of Donaldson and Kymlicka's wild animal sovereignty theory, a defence of indirect approaches to animal rights, an extensive discussion of euthanasia as a 'therapeutic hunting' tool, and the first discussion of Locke's theory of original acquisition in animal rights literature.

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The book is written in English.
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