Science, Gender and the Exploitation of Animals in Britain Since 1945

Science, Gender and the Exploitation of Animals in Britain Since 1945

Duxbury, Catherine

Taylor & Francis Ltd

09/2021

218

Dura

Inglês

9781138617537

15 a 20 dias

570

Descrição não disponível.
Introduction: Accounting for the More-Than-Human Section One: Law, Animal Welfare and Gender 1. British Animal Experimentation Law since 1945: Property, Pastoral Power and Governmentality 2. The March of Thatcherism: Neoliberal Laboratory "Care" and the Assent of the ASPA, 1981-1986 3. The Power-Pain Nexus: How Women's Subjugation Subtends Speciesism in the Legal System Section Two: Scientific Intersections: The Practice of Animal Experimentation and Its Gendered Dimensions 4. Animal Experimentation at Porton Down: Britain's Military-Animal-Industrial Complex, 1948-1955 5. Containing the Laboratory Animal: Laboratory Spaces and Gendered Places, 1947-Present 6. Anxious Animals, Monstrous Menstruating Women and the Science of Stress 1947-Present Section Three: Conclusion: 21st Century Compassion Fatigue Conclusion
Nonhuman Animals;animals;Laboratory Animal Science;gender;Laboratory Animal Welfare;science;ASPA;experimentation;Laboratory Animal;women;Nonhuman Bodies;animal experimentation;Pastoral Power;history;Lab Animal;Catherine Duxbury;Animal Welfare;Britain;Pre-menstrual Syndrome;1945;National Antivivisection Society;present;RDS;twentieth century;Contemporary Society;20th century;Venezuelan Equine Encephalomyelitis;norms;Operation Harness;values;Power Knowledge Relations;state;Animal House;British state;Ben Lomond;neoliberal;MERS;neoliberal state;Container Technologies;neoliberal British state;Female Sex Hormone;speciesist;Cat's Cradle;cosmetic testing;Estrous Cycle Phases;military research;CEDAW;psychiatry;CRAE;power;knowledge production;scientific culture;scientific norms;scientific values;power-knowledge relations;sociology;cultural history;social problems