Animal welfare is the well-being of nonhuman animals.
The standards of "good" animal welfare vary considerably between
different contexts. These standards are under constant review and are
debated, created and revised by animal welfare groups, legislators and
academics worldwide. Animal welfare science uses various measures, such as longevity, disease, immunosuppression, behavior, physiology, and reproduction, although there is debate about which of these indicators provide the best information.
Respect for animal welfare is often based on the belief that nonhuman animals are sentient and that consideration should be given to their well-being or suffering, especially when they are under the care of humans. These concerns can include how animals are slaughtered
for food, how they are used in scientific research, how they are kept
(as pets, in zoos, farms, circuses, etc.), and how human activities
affect the welfare and survival of wild species.
There are two forms of criticism of the concept of animal
welfare, coming from diametrically opposite positions. One view, held by
some thinkers in history, holds that humans have no duties of any kind
to animals. The other view is based on the animal rights
position that animals should not be regarded as property and any use of
animals by humans is unacceptable. Accordingly, some animal rights
proponents argue that the perception of better animal welfare
facilitates continued and increased exploitation of animals. Some authorities therefore treat animal welfare and animal rights as two opposing positions. Others see animal welfare gains as incremental steps towards animal rights.
The predominant view of modern neuroscientists, notwithstanding philosophical problems with the definition of consciousness even in humans, is that consciousness exists in nonhuman animals. However, some still maintain that consciousness is a philosophical question that may never be scientifically resolved.
History, principles and practice
Early legislation in the Western world on behalf of animals includes the Ireland Parliament (Thomas Wentworth) "An Act against Plowing by the Tayle, and pulling the Wooll off living Sheep", 1635, and the Massachusetts Colony (Nathaniel Ward) "Off the Bruite Creatures" Liberty 92 and 93 in the "Massachusetts Body of Liberties" of 1641.
Since 1822, when Irish MP Richard Martin brought the "Cruel Treatment of Cattle Act 1822"
through Parliament offering protection from cruelty to cattle, horses,
and sheep, an animal welfare movement has been active in England. Martin
was among the founders of the world's first animal welfare
organization, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, or SPCA, in 1824. In 1840, Queen Victoria gave the society her blessing, and it became the RSPCA.
The society used members' donations to employ a growing network of
inspectors, whose job was to identify abusers, gather evidence, and
report them to the authorities.
In 1837, the German minister Albert Knapp founded the first German animal welfare society.
One of the first national laws to protect animals was the UK "Cruelty to Animals Act 1835" followed by the "Protection of Animals Act 1911". In the US it was many years until there was a national law to protect animals—the "Animal Welfare Act of 1966"—although there were a number of states that passed anti-cruelty laws between 1828 and 1898. In India, animals are protected by the "Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960".
Significant progress in animal welfare did not take place until the late 20th century.
In 1965, the UK government commissioned an investigation—led by
Professor Roger Brambell—into the welfare of intensively farmed animals,
partly in response to concerns raised in Ruth Harrison's 1964 book, Animal Machines.
On the basis of Professor Brambell's report, the UK government set up
the Farm Animal Welfare Advisory Committee in 1967, which became the Farm Animal Welfare Council
in 1979. The committee's first guidelines recommended that animals
require the freedoms to "stand up, lie down, turn around, groom
themselves and stretch their limbs." The guidelines have since been
elaborated upon to become known as the Five Freedoms.
In the UK, the "Animal Welfare Act 2006" consolidated many different forms of animal welfare legislation.
A number of animal welfare organizations are campaigning to achieve a Universal Declaration on Animal Welfare
(UDAW) at the United Nations. In principle, the Universal Declaration
would call on the United Nations to recognize animals as sentient
beings, capable of experiencing pain and suffering, and to recognize
that animal welfare is an issue of importance as part of the social
development of nations worldwide. The campaign to achieve the UDAW is
being coordinated by World Animal Protection, with a core working group including Compassion in World Farming, the RSPCA, and the Humane Society International (the international branch of HSUS).
Animal welfare science
Animal welfare science
is an emerging field that seeks to answer questions raised by the
keeping and use of animals, such as whether hens are frustrated when
confined in cages, whether the psychological well-being of animals in laboratories can be maintained, and whether zoo animals are stressed by the transport required for international conservation.
Animal welfare issues
- Animal testing
- Abandoned pets
- Behavioral enrichment
- Blood sport
- Cruelty to animals
- Feral cat
- Hunting
- Overpopulation in companion animals
- Overview of discretionary invasive procedures on animals
- Poaching
- Puppy mills
- Whaling
Farm animals
A major concern for the welfare of farm animals is factory farming
in which large numbers of animals are reared in confinement at high
stocking densities. Issues include the limited opportunities for natural
behaviors, for example, in battery cages, veal and gestation crates, instead producing abnormal behaviors such as tail-biting, cannibalism, and feather pecking, and routine invasive procedures such as beak trimming, castration, and ear notching. More extensive methods of farming, e.g. free range, can also raise welfare concerns such as the mulesing of sheep, predation of stock by wild animals, and biosecurity.
Farm animals are artificially selected for production parameters which sometimes impinge on the animals' welfare. For example, broiler
chickens are bred to be very large to produce the greatest quantity of
meat per animal. Broilers bred for fast growth have a high incidence of
leg deformities because the large breast muscles cause distortions of
the developing legs and pelvis, and the birds cannot support their
increased body weight. As a consequence, they frequently become lame or
suffer from broken legs. The increased body weight also puts a strain on
their hearts and lungs, and ascites
often develops. In the UK alone, up to 20 million broilers each year
die from the stress of catching and transport before reaching the
slaughterhouse.
Another concern about the welfare of farm animals is the method of slaughter, especially ritual slaughter.
While the killing of animals need not necessarily involve suffering,
the general public considers that killing an animal reduces its welfare. This leads to further concerns about premature slaughtering such as chick culling by the laying hen industry,
in which males are slaughtered immediately after hatching because they
are superfluous; this policy occurs in other farm animal industries such
as the production of goat and cattle milk, raising the same concerns.
Cetaceans
Captive cetaceans are kept for display, research and naval
operations. To enhance their welfare, humans feed them fish which are
dead, but are disease-free, protect them from predators and injury,
monitor their health, and provide activities for behavioral enrichment. Some are kept in lagoons with natural soil and vegetated sides. Most are in concrete tanks which are easy to clean, but echo their natural sounds back to them. They cannot develop their own social groups, and related cetaceans are typically separated for display and breeding. Military dolphins used in naval operations swim free during operations and training, and return to pens otherwise.
Captive cetaceans are trained to present themselves for blood samples,
health exams and noninvasive breath samples above their blow holes. Staff can monitor the captives afterwards for signs of infection from the procedure.
Research on wild cetaceans leaves them free to roam and
make sounds in their natural habitat, eat live fish, face predators and
injury, and form social groups voluntarily. However boat engines of
researchers, whale watchers and others add substantial noise to their
natural environment, reducing their ability to echolocate and
communicate. Electric engines
are far quieter, but are not widely used for either research or whale
watching, even for maintaining position, which does not require much
power. Vancouver Port offers discounts for ships with quiet propeller and hull designs. Other areas have reduced speeds. Boat engines also have unshielded propellers, which cause serious injuries to cetaceans who come close to the propeller. The US Coast Guard has proposed rules on propeller guards to protect human swimmers, but has not adopted any rules. The US Navy uses propeller guards to protect manatees in Georgia. Ducted propellers
provide more efficient drive at speeds up to 10 knots, and protect
animals beneath and beside them, but need grilles to prevent injuries to
animals drawn into the duct.
Attaching satellite trackers and obtaining biopsies to measure
pollution loads and DNA involve either capture and release, or shooting
the cetaceans from a distance with dart guns.
A cetacean was killed by a fungal infection after being darted, due to
either an incompletely sterilized dart or an infection from the ocean
entering the wound caused by the dart. Researchers on wild cetaceans have not yet been able to use drones to capture noninvasive breath samples.
Other harms to wild cetaceans include commercial whaling, aboriginal whaling, drift netting, ship collisions, water pollution, noise from sonar and reflection seismology, predators, loss of prey, disease. Efforts to enhance the life of wild cetaceans, besides reducing those harms, include offering human music.
Canadian rules do not forbid playing quiet music, though they forbid
"noise that may resemble whale songs or calls, under water".
Legislation
European Union
The European Commission's activities in this area start with the recognition that animals are sentient beings.
The general aim is to ensure that animals do not endure avoidable pain
or suffering, and obliges the owner/keeper of animals to respect minimum
welfare requirements. European Union legislation regarding farm animal welfare is regularly re-drafted according to science-based evidence and cultural views. For example, in 2009, legislation was passed which aimed to reduce animal suffering during slaughter and on January 1, 2012, the European Union Council Directive 1999/74/EC came into act, which means that conventional battery cages for laying hens are now banned across the Union.
United Kingdom
The Animal Welfare Act 2006
makes owners and keepers responsible for ensuring that the welfare
needs of their animals are met. These include the need: for a suitable
environment (place to live), for a suitable diet, to exhibit normal
behavior patterns, to be housed with, or apart from, other animals (if
applicable), and to be protected from pain, injury, suffering and
disease.
Anyone who is cruel to an animal, or does not provide for its welfare
needs, may be banned from owning animals, fined up to £20,000 and/or
sent to prison for a maximum of six months.
In the UK, the welfare of research animals being used for "regulated procedures" was historically protected by the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 (ASPA) which is administrated by the Home Office.
The Act defines "regulated procedures" as animal experiments that could
potentially cause "pain, suffering, distress or lasting harm" to
"protected animals". Initially, "protected animals" encompassed all
living vertebrates other than humans, but, in 1993, an amendment added a single invertebrate species, the common octopus.
Primates, cats, dogs, and horses
have additional protection over other vertebrates under the Act.
Revised legislation came into force in January 2013. This has been
expanded to protect "...all living vertebrates, other than man, and any
living cephalopod.
Fish and amphibia are protected once they can feed independently and
cephalopods at the point when they hatch. Embryonic and fetal forms of
mammals, birds and reptiles are protected during the last third of their
gestation or incubation period." The definition of regulated procedures
was also expanded: "A procedure is regulated if it is carried out on
a protected animal and may cause that animal a level of pain,
suffering, distress or lasting harm equivalent to, or higher than, that
caused by inserting a hypodermic needle according to good veterinary
practice." It also includes modifying the genes of a protected
animal if this causes the animal pain, suffering, distress, or lasting
harm. The ASPA also considers other issues such as animal sources, housing conditions, identification methods, and the humane killing of animals.
This legislation is widely regarded as the strictest in the world.
Those applying for a license must explain why such research cannot be
done through non-animal methods. The project must also pass an ethical
review panel which aims to decide if the potential benefits outweigh any
suffering for the animals involved.
United States
In
the United States, a federal law called the Humane Slaughter Act was
designed to decrease suffering of livestock during slaughter.
The Georgia Animal Protection Act of 1986 was a state law enacted in response to the inhumane treatment of companion animals by a pet store chain in Atlanta.
The Act provided for the licensing and regulation of pet shops,
stables, kennels, and animal shelters, and established, for the first
time, minimum standards of care. Additional provisions, called the
Humane Euthanasia Act, were added in 1990, and then further expanded and strengthened with the Animal Protection Act of 2000.
In 2002, voters passed (by a margin of 55% for and 45% against)
Amendment 10 to the Florida Constitution banning the confinement of
pregnant pigs in gestation crates. In 2006, Arizona voters passed Proposition 204
with 62% support; the legislation prohibits the confinement of calves
in veal crates and breeding sows in gestation crates. In 2007, the Governor of Oregon signed legislation prohibiting the confinement of pigs in gestation crates and in 2008, the Governor of Colorado signed legislation that phased out both gestation crates and veal crates. Also during 2008, California passed Proposition 2, known as the "Prevention of Farm Animal Cruelty Act", which orders new space requirements for farm animals starting in 2015.
In the US, every institution that uses vertebrate animals for federally funded laboratory research must have an Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC).
Each local IACUC reviews research protocols and conducts evaluations of
the institution's animal care and use which includes the results of
inspections of facilities that are required by law. The IACUC committee
must assess the steps taken to "enhance animal well-being" before
research can take place. This includes research on farm animals.
According to the National Institutes of Health
Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare, researchers must try to minimize
distress in animals whenever possible: "Animals used in research and
testing may experience pain from induced diseases, procedures, and
toxicity. The Public Health Service (PHS) Policy and Animal Welfare
Regulations (AWRs) state that procedures that cause more than momentary
or slight pain or distress should be performed with appropriate
sedation, analgesia, or anesthesia.
However, research and testing studies sometimes involve pain that
cannot be relieved with such agents because they would interfere with
the scientific objectives of the study. Accordingly, federal regulations
require that IACUCs determine that discomfort to animals will be
limited to that which is unavoidable for the conduct of scientifically
valuable research, and that unrelieved pain and distress will only
continue for the duration necessary to accomplish the scientific
objectives. The PHS Policy and AWRs further state that animals that
would otherwise suffer severe or chronic pain and distress that cannot
be relieved should be painlessly killed at the end of the procedure, or
if appropriate, during the procedure."
The National Research Council's Guide for the Care and Use of
Laboratory Animals also serves as a guide to improve welfare for animals
used in research in the US.
The Federation of Animal Science Societies' Guide for the Care and Use
of Agricultural Animals in Research and Teaching is a resource
addressing welfare concerns in farm animal research. Laboratory animals in the US are also protected under the Animal Welfare Act. The United States Department of Agriculture
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) enforces the Animal
Welfare Act. APHIS inspects animal research facilities regularly and
reports are published online.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the total
number of animals used in the U.S. in 2005 was almost 1.2 million,
but this does not include rats, mice, and birds which are not covered
by welfare legislation but make up approximately 90% of research
animals.
Approaches and definitions
There are many different approaches to describing and defining animal welfare.
Positive conditions - Providing good animal welfare is
sometimes defined by a list of positive conditions which should be
provided to the animal. This approach is taken by the Five Freedoms and
the three principles of Professor John Webster.
The Five Freedoms are:
- Freedom from thirst and hunger – by ready access to fresh water and a diet to maintain full health and vigor
- Freedom from discomfort – by providing an appropriate environment including shelter and a comfortable resting area
- Freedom from pain, injury, and disease – by prevention or rapid diagnosis and treatment
- Freedom to express most normal behavior – by providing sufficient space, proper facilities, and company of the animal's own kind
- Freedom from fear and distress – by ensuring conditions and treatment which avoid mental suffering
John Webster defines animal welfare by advocating three positive
conditions: Living a natural life, being fit and healthy, and being
happy.
High production - In the past, many have seen farm animal welfare chiefly in terms of whether the animal is producing well.
The argument is that an animal in poor welfare would not be producing
well, however, many farmed animals will remain highly productive despite
being in conditions where good welfare is almost certainly compromised,
e.g., layer hens in battery cages.
Emotion in animals - Others in the field, such as Professor Ian Duncan and Professor Marian Dawkins,
focus more on the feelings of the animal. This approach indicates the
belief that animals should be considered as sentient beings. Duncan
wrote, "Animal welfare is to do with the feelings experienced by
animals: the absence of strong negative feelings, usually called
suffering, and (probably) the presence of positive feelings, usually
called pleasure. In any assessment of welfare, it is these feelings that
should be assessed." Dawkins wrote, "Let us not mince words: Animal welfare involves the subjective feelings of animals."
Welfare biology - Yew-Kwang Ng defines animal welfare in terms of welfare economics:
"Welfare biology is the study of living things and their environment
with respect to their welfare (defined as net happiness, or enjoyment minus suffering).
Despite difficulties of ascertaining and measuring welfare and
relevancy to normative issues, welfare biology is a positive science."
Dictionary definition - In the Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary,
animal welfare is defined as "the avoidance of abuse and exploitation
of animals by humans by maintaining appropriate standards of
accommodation, feeding and general care, the prevention and treatment of
disease and the assurance of freedom from harassment, and unnecessary
discomfort and pain."
American Veterinary Medical Association
(AVMA) has defined animal welfare as: "An animal is in a good state of
welfare if (as indicated by scientific evidence) it is healthy,
comfortable, well nourished, safe, able to express innate behavior, and
if it is not suffering from unpleasant states such as pain, fear, and
distress." They have offered the following eight principles for developing and evaluating animal welfare policies.
- The responsible use of animals for human purposes, such as companionship, food, fiber, recreation, work, education, exhibition, and research conducted for the benefit of both humans and animals, is consistent with the Veterinarian's Oath.
- Decisions regarding animal care, use, and welfare shall be made by balancing scientific knowledge and professional judgment with consideration of ethical and societal values.
- Animals must be provided water, food, proper handling, health care, and an environment appropriate to their care and use, with thoughtful consideration for their species-typical biology and behavior.
- Animals should be cared for in ways that minimize fear, pain, stress, and suffering.
- Procedures related to animal housing, management, care, and use should be continuously evaluated, and when indicated, refined or replaced.
- Conservation and management of animal populations should be humane, socially responsible, and scientifically prudent.
- Animals shall be treated with respect and dignity throughout their lives and, when necessary, provided a humane death.
- The veterinary profession shall continually strive to improve animal health and welfare through scientific research, education, collaboration, advocacy, and the development of legislation and regulations.
Terrestrial Animal Health Code of World Organization for Animal Health
defines animal welfare as "how an animal is coping with the conditions
in which it lives. An animal is in a good state of welfare if (as
indicated by scientific evidence) it is healthy, comfortable, well
nourished, safe, able to express innate behavior, and if it is not
suffering from unpleasant states such as pain, fear, and distress. Good
animal welfare requires disease prevention and veterinary treatment,
appropriate shelter, management, nutrition, humane handling and humane
slaughter/killing. Animal welfare refers to the state of the animal; the
treatment that an animal receives is covered by other terms such as
animal care, animal husbandry, and humane treatment."
Coping - Professor Donald Broom
defines the welfare of an animal as "Its state as regards its attempts
to cope with its environment. This state includes how much it is having
to do to cope, the extent to which it is succeeding in or failing to
cope, and its associated feelings." He states that "welfare will vary
over a continuum from very good to very poor and studies of welfare will
be most effective if a wide range of measures is used." John Webster criticized this definition for making "no attempt to say what constitutes good or bad welfare."
Attitudes
Animal welfare often
refers to a utilitarian attitude towards the well-being of nonhuman
animals. It believes the animals can be exploited if the animal
suffering and the costs of use is less than the benefits to humans. This attitude is also known simply as welfarism.
An example of welfarist thought is Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall's meat manifesto. Point three of eight is:
Think about the animals that the meat you eat comes from. Are you at all concerned about how they have been treated? Have they lived well? Have they been fed on safe, appropriate foods? Have they been cared for by someone who respects them and enjoys contact with them? Would you like to be sure of that? Perhaps it's time to find out a bit more about where the meat you eat comes from. Or to buy from a source that reassures you about these points.
Robert Garner describes the welfarist position as the most widely held in modern society. He states that one of the best attempts to clarify this position is given by Robert Nozick:
Consider the following (too minimal) position about the treatment of animals. So that we can easily refer to it, let us label this position "utilitarianism for animals, Kantianism for people." It says: (1) maximize the total happiness of all living beings; (2) place stringent side constraints on what one may do to human beings. Human beings may not be used or sacrificed for the benefit of others; animals may be used or sacrificed for the benefit of other people or animals only if those benefits are greater than the loss inflicted.
Welfarism is often contrasted with the animal rights
and animal liberation positions, which hold that animals should not be
used by humans and should not be regarded as human property.
However, it has been argued that both welfarism and animal liberation
only make sense if it is assumed that animals have "subjective welfare".
New welfarism
New welfarism was coined by Gary L. Francione in 1996.
It is a view that the best way to prevent animal suffering is to
abolish the causes of animal suffering, but advancing animal welfare is a
goal to pursue in the short term. Thus, for instance, new welfarists
want to phase out fur farms and animal experiments but in the short-term
they try to improve conditions for the animals in these systems, so
they lobby to make cages less constrictive and to reduce the numbers of
animals used in laboratories.
Within the context of animal research,
many scientific organizations believe that improved animal welfare will
provide improved scientific outcomes. If an animal in a laboratory is
suffering stress or pain it could negatively affect the results of the research.
Increased affluence in many regions for the past few decades
afforded consumers the disposable income to purchase products from high
welfare systems.
The adaptation of more economically efficient farming systems in these
regions were at the expense of animal welfare and to the financial
benefit of consumers, both of which were factors in driving the demand
for higher welfare for farm animals.
A 2006 survey concluded that a majority (63%) of EU citizens "show some
willingness to change their usual place of shopping in order to be able
to purchase more animal welfare-friendly products."
The volume of scientific research on animal welfare has also increased significantly in some countries.
Criticisms
Denial of duties to animals
Some individuals in history have, at least in principle, rejected the view that humans have duties of any kind to animals.
Augustine of Hippo seemed to take such a position in his writings against those he saw as heretics:
"For we see and hear by their cries that animals die with pain, although
man disregards this in a beast, with which, as not having a rational
soul, we have no community of rights."
Animal rights
Animal rights advocates, such as Gary L. Francione and Tom Regan,
argue that the animal welfare position (advocating for the betterment
of the condition of animals, but without abolishing animal use) is
inconsistent in logic and ethically unacceptable. However, there are
some animal right groups, such as PETA, which support animal welfare measures in the short term to alleviate animal suffering until all animal use is ended.
According to PETA's Ingrid Newkirk in an interview with Wikinews,
there are two issues in animal welfare and animal rights. "If I only
could have one thing, it would be to end suffering", said Newkirk. "If
you could take things from animals and kill animals all day long without
causing them suffering, then I would take it... Everybody should be
able to agree that animals should not suffer if you kill them or steal
from them by taking the fur off their backs or take their eggs,
whatever. But you shouldn't put them through torture to do that."
Abolitionism
holds that focusing on animal welfare not only fails to challenge
animal suffering, but may actually prolong it by making the exercise of
property rights over animals appear less unattractive. The
abolitionists' objective is to secure a moral and legal paradigm shift,
whereby animals are no longer regarded as property.
Animal welfare organizations
Global
World Organization for Animal Health
(OIE): The intergovernmental organization responsible for improving
animal health worldwide. The OIE has been established "for the purpose
of projects of international public utility relating to the control of
animal diseases, including those affecting humans and the promotion of
animal welfare and animal production food safety."
World Animal Protection: Protects animals across the globe. World Animal Protection's
objectives include helping people understand the critical importance of
good animal welfare, encouraging nations to commit to animal-friendly
practices, and building the scientific case for the better treatment of
animals. They are global in a sense that they have consultative status
at the Council of Europe and collaborate with national governments, the
United Nations, the Food and Agriculture Organization and the World
Organization for Animal Health.
Non-government organizations
Canadian Council on Animal Care: The national organization responsible for overseeing the care and use of animals involved in Canadian Science.
Canadian Federation of Humane Societies
(CFHS): The only national organization representing humane societies
and SPCAs in Canada. They provide leadership on animal welfare issues
and spread the message across Canada.
The Canadian Veterinary Medical Association: Brings in veterinary
involvement to animal welfare. Their objective is to share this concern
of animals with all members of the profession, with the general public,
with government at all levels, and with other organizations such as the
CFHS, which have similar concerns.
Compassion in World Farming:
Founded over 40 years ago in 1967 by a British farmer who became
horrified by the development of modern, intensive factory farming.
"Today we campaign peacefully to end all cruel factory farming
practices. We believe that the biggest cause of cruelty on the planet
deserves a focused, specialised approach – so we only work on farm
animal welfare."
The Movement for Compassionate Living: Exists to-
"Promote simple vegan living and self-reliance as a remedy against the exploitation of humans, animals and the Earth.
Promote the use of trees and vegan-organic farming to meet the needs of society for food and natural resources.
Promote a land-based society where as much of our food and resources as possible are produced locally."
National Animal Interest Alliance:
An animal welfare organization in the United States founded in 1991
promotes the welfare of animals, strengthens the human-animal bond, and
safeguards the rights of responsible animal owners, enthusiasts and
professionals through research, public information and sound public
policy.
They host an online library of information about various animal-related
subjects serving as a resource for groups and individuals dedicated to
responsible animal care and well-being.
National Farm Animal Care Council: Their objectives are to
facilitate collaboration among members with respect to farm animal care
issues in Canada, to facilitate information sharing and communication,
and to monitor trends and initiatives in both the domestic and
international market place.
National Office of Animal Health: A British organisation that represents its members drawn from the animal medicines industry.
Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals: A registered charity comprising over 50 communities.
Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals: A well-known animal welfare charity in England and Wales, founded in 1824.
Universities Federation for Animal Welfare:
A UK registered charity, established in 1926, that works to develop and
promote improvements in the welfare of all animals through scientific
and educational activity worldwide.