Introduction Lori Gruen and Justin Marceau; Part I. Carceral Thinking in Animal Protection: Justifications and Repudiations: 1. Saved: the historical roots of humane carceral logics in the United States Paula Tarankow; 2. Criminal animal abuse: interconnectedness, and human morality Richard L. Cupp, Jr; 3. Giving a voice to the voiceless: a prosecutor's efforts to combat animal cruelty Ashley N. Beck; 4. Examining anticruelty enhancements: historical context and policy advances Pamela D. Frasch; 5. Carceral progressivism and animal victims Benjamin Levin; Part II. Animal Law in Context: The Limits of Carceral Strategies: 6. Spectacular immigration enforcement in hidden spaces aging and immigration enforcement Jennifer M. Chacón; 7. Against a 'war on animal cruelty': lessons from the war on drugs and mass incarceration Sam Kamin; 8. Criminalization as a solution to abuse: a cautionary tale Tamara L. Kuennen; 9. Humanizing animals, dehumanizing humans Aya Gruber; 10. Treating humans worse than animals? Exposing a false solitary confinement narrative Delcianna Winders; 11. Carceral logics beyond incarceration Justin F. Marceau; Part III. Implications of Carceral Logics and Carceral Spaces for Animals and for Humans: 12. Incarcerating animals and egregious losses of freedoms Jessica Pierce and Marc Bekoff; 13. Juvenile smokescreens: softening the harm of zoos, aquaria and prisons through (human) children Maneesha Deckha; 14. Bovine lives and the making of a nineteenth-century American carceral archipelago Karen M. Morin; 15. Animals in prison: collateral damage and commodities of 'rehabilitation' Kelly Struthers Montford; 16. Political prisoners and the repression of animal liberation and intersectional environmental justice movements David N.Pellow; Part IV. Challenging Captivity and Changing Carceral Thinking: 17. Cause lawyering for the caged: invisibility, moral suasion, and defranchisement in the prisoners' rights and animal protection movements Alan K. Chen and Vikram David Amar; 18. Litigating animal capitivy: habeas corpus in the carceral state Jessica Eisen; 19. 'True' imprisonment Douglas A. Kysa; 20. Imagining animal rights as a civil rights movement Will Potter; 21. Abolition: thinking beyond carceral logics Lori Gruen.
We incarcerate humans as a form of punishment and we cage animals for food, entertainment, and research. Are there lessons one site of carcerality can teach us about the other?
Lori Gruen is the William Griffin Professor of Philosophy at Wesleyan University. She is also the founder and coordinator of Wesleyan Animal Studies and the author or editor of over a dozen books, including Ethics and Animals: An Introduction (Cambridge, 2021), Critical Terms for Animal Studies (2018), and The Ethics of Captivity (2014). Justin F. Marceau is a Professor of Law at the University of Denver, Research Scholar at the Brooks Institute, and an active animal protection and civil rights litigator. He is the author of Beyond Cages (Cambridge, 2019).
'Carceral logics permeate our thinking about humans and nonhumans.
We imagine that greater punishment will reduce crime and make
society safer. We hope more convictions and policing for animal
crimes will keep animals safe and elevate their social status. The
dominant approach to human-animal relations is governed by an
unjust imbalance of power that subordinates or ignores the interest
nonhumans have in freedom. In this volume, Gruen and Marceau
invited experts to provide insights into the complicated
intersection of issues that arise in thinking about animal law,
violence, mass incarceration, and social change. Carceral
Logics is remarkable in how far it expands and deepens our
understanding of the animal protection movement's carceral
tendencies, the impulses that motivate them, and the alternatives
before us. This book will undoubtedly not only shape
research and debate, but help to inform the continued development
of a more just and inclusive animal protection movement.' Mercy For
Animals
'Many of the most well-funded nonprofits in the animal protection
movement have colluded with police, prosecutors, and for-profit
animal torturing corporations to pursue mass human caging that has
no discernable benefit to the animals they ostensibly seek to
protect. With this brilliant, rigorous new volume, leading scholars
and activists expose the intellectual dishonesty, ideological
inconsistency, corruption, and lack of connection to other
liberatory movements that have plagued the animal protection
movement for too long. It is an essential call to change for all
those who care about the value of human and nonhuman life.' Alec
Karakatsanis, founder of Civil Rights Corps, and author of Usual
Cruelty
'What do we do when laws prohibiting animal cruelty fail to stop
the vast majority of violence inflicted upon animals? Essential
reading for anyone working to enact laws to protect
animals, Carceral Logics insists that we measure our
success and assess our failures by the real-world impacts such laws
have on humans and nonhumans.' Lauren Gazzola, SHAC 7 defendant
'Carceral Logics invites readers into the messiness of the
ways we treat each other and nonhuman animals. The essays resist
simple equations of the experiences of human incarceration with
nonhuman animal abuse and confinement, while challenging the
assumptions that undergird each. What is revealed? That
carceral logics belong to us, and dismantling these logics requires
more than reform - we need systemic reimagining.' Reginald Dwayne
Betts, founder of Freedom Reads, and author of Felon
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