16 research outputs found

    Similarity or Difference as a Basis for Justice: Must Animals Be Like Humans to Be Legally Protected from Humans?

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    Justice may not require that animals be exactly the same as humans or that they have rights exactly coterminous with the rights of humans, but justice would require that animals receive protection in ways that match up with those similarities they share with humans that are characteristics considered essential to the understanding of what it means to be human. Stated generally, the argument is that if animals are similar to humans as to capacities and characteristics of humans that define humans, then animals should receive protections equivalent to the protections of humans because a just society treats like entities alike

    Social Psychology and the Value of Vegan Business Representation for Animal Law Reform

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    Article published in the Michigan State Law Review

    Social Psychology and the Value of Vegan Business Representation for Animal Law Reform

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    Article published in the Michigan State Law Review

    Trauma, Law, and Advocacy for Animals

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    Family Models, Family Dispute Resolution and Family Law in Japan

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    Photo from Norm Nevills expedition down the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon, July 12 to August 7, 1942. River scene (possibly in Marble Canyon)

    Oya-Ko Shinju: Death at the Center of the Heart

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