Ethical impact on EU animal welfare policies

On December 1th 2009 the Lisbon Treaty entered into force, and through Article 13, the recognition of animals as sentient being was given a more visible part in the very core of EU law. This was an effect of a political decision to commit to the issue, partly because of the will to further harmonize...

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Main Author: Tjärnström, Elisabeth
Format: First cycle, G2E
Language:Inglés
Inglés
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1572/
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author Tjärnström, Elisabeth
author_browse Tjärnström, Elisabeth
author_facet Tjärnström, Elisabeth
author_sort Tjärnström, Elisabeth
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description On December 1th 2009 the Lisbon Treaty entered into force, and through Article 13, the recognition of animals as sentient being was given a more visible part in the very core of EU law. This was an effect of a political decision to commit to the issue, partly because of the will to further harmonize the EU market, but also due to increased societal concern for the wellbeing of animals. Over the last decades, ethical awareness is growing in many countries, one reason being new scientific discovery. This influences legislators and policy makers to take proper action, and in this way, ethics and science often work together as the very basis for the development of new legislation and policies. There is yet to be seen what the actual consequences of Article 13 will be, since the legal obligation remains the same and there are still some reservations in it. However, the increased visibility of animal welfare as an issue and the fact that it is today included in- and cohesive with many other policy areas, gives it weight and legitimacy as an EU agenda. Article 13 will probably be able to work as an anchor for new policy initiatives in animal welfare, and as a means to stress proper implementation of existing legislation. There are however future challenges ahead for those who work with promoting animal welfare, both in the EU and at other levels, because of the need to integrate it with economic growth and competitiveness. Keys to further success for EU animal welfare policies include increased collaboration with other areas in order to develop a common understanding and more cohesive goals, as well as having clear arguments and a solid scientific basis.
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Inglés
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spelling RepoSLU15722024-07-10T09:35:17Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1572/ Ethical impact on EU animal welfare policies Tjärnström, Elisabeth Legislation Agricultural economics and policies Animal husbandry On December 1th 2009 the Lisbon Treaty entered into force, and through Article 13, the recognition of animals as sentient being was given a more visible part in the very core of EU law. This was an effect of a political decision to commit to the issue, partly because of the will to further harmonize the EU market, but also due to increased societal concern for the wellbeing of animals. Over the last decades, ethical awareness is growing in many countries, one reason being new scientific discovery. This influences legislators and policy makers to take proper action, and in this way, ethics and science often work together as the very basis for the development of new legislation and policies. There is yet to be seen what the actual consequences of Article 13 will be, since the legal obligation remains the same and there are still some reservations in it. However, the increased visibility of animal welfare as an issue and the fact that it is today included in- and cohesive with many other policy areas, gives it weight and legitimacy as an EU agenda. Article 13 will probably be able to work as an anchor for new policy initiatives in animal welfare, and as a means to stress proper implementation of existing legislation. There are however future challenges ahead for those who work with promoting animal welfare, both in the EU and at other levels, because of the need to integrate it with economic growth and competitiveness. Keys to further success for EU animal welfare policies include increased collaboration with other areas in order to develop a common understanding and more cohesive goals, as well as having clear arguments and a solid scientific basis. 2010-07-06 First cycle, G2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1572/1/tjarnstrom_e_060710.pdf Tjärnström, Elisabeth, 2010. Ethical impact on EU animal welfare policies : the example of Article 13. First cycle, G2E. Skara: (VH) > Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-880.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-3-122 eng
spellingShingle Legislation
Agricultural economics and policies
Animal husbandry
Tjärnström, Elisabeth
Ethical impact on EU animal welfare policies
title Ethical impact on EU animal welfare policies
title_full Ethical impact on EU animal welfare policies
title_fullStr Ethical impact on EU animal welfare policies
title_full_unstemmed Ethical impact on EU animal welfare policies
title_short Ethical impact on EU animal welfare policies
title_sort ethical impact on eu animal welfare policies
topic Legislation
Agricultural economics and policies
Animal husbandry
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1572/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1572/