Measuring Humaneness: Can It Be Done, and What Does It Mean If It Can?
Autor: | John Griffin, John Hadidian, Bernard Unti |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Operationalization
Public economics Strategy and Management Mechanical Engineering Control (management) Metals and Alloys Life Sciences Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering animal welfare Domain (software engineering) humane animal protection Action (philosophy) humaneness Animal welfare Political science Griffin welfare assessment Engineering ethics Objectivity (science) welfare criteria |
Zdroj: | Hadidian, John; Unti, Bernard; & Griffin, John. (2014). Measuring Humaneness: Can It Be Done, and What Does It Mean If It Can?. Proceedings of the Vertebrate Pest Conference, 26(26), 443-448. doi: 10.5070/V426110335. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/9m30360j |
ISSN: | 2641-273X |
Popis: | Author(s): Hadidian, John; Unti, Bernard; Griffin, John | Abstract: Differences over what constitutes humaneness in the control of wildlife have traditionally presented a roadblock to under-standing, not to mention agreement, between animal welfare and wildlife damage management professionals. Complaints that a proposed action or given program is not humane can refer to everything from specific techniques to broader adminis-trative justifications. A number of concepts have been used to describe welfare standards and measurements, and different assessment metrics have been developed in attempts to bring objectivity to what might prove, in the end, to be an intracta-bly subjective domain. Some of the most widely used and serviceable of the concepts intended to operationalize what humaneness is are described and reviewed here. The need for a more accepted and agreeable framework for humaneness is discussed, and designating “humane” as a keyword is proposed as one means by which that framework can better realized. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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