Just Fodder

The Ethics of Feeding Animals

By Josh Milburn
Categories: Philosophy, Environmental & Nature Studies, Animal Studies, Business, Economics & Industry, Agriculture & Food Production, Social Sciences, Food & Cooking, Health, Social Work & Psychology, Health & Medicine
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780228011354, 240 pages, July 2022
Paperback : 9780228011514, 240 pages, July 2022
Ebook (PDF) : 9780228013235, July 2022
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780228013242, July 2022

A radical approach to animal rights that brings into question when – and what – we should feed animals.

Description

Animal lovers who feed meat to other animals are faced with a paradox: perhaps fewer animals would be harmed if they stopped feeding the ones they love. Animal diets do not raise problems merely for individuals. To address environmental crises, health threats, and harm to animals, we must change our food systems and practices. And in these systems, animals, too, are eaters.

Moving beyond what humans should eat and whether to count animals as food, Just Fodder answers ethical and political questions arising from thinking about animals as eaters. Josh Milburn begins with practical dilemmas about feeding the animals closest to us, our pets or animal companions. The questions grow more complicated as he considers relationships with more distance – questions about whether and how to feed garden birds, farmland animals who would eat our crops, and wild animals. Milburn evaluates the nature and circumstances of our relationships with animals to generate a novel theory of animal rights.

Looking past arguments about what we can and cannot do to other beings, Just Fodder asks what we can, should, and must do for them, laying out a fuller range of our ethical obligations to other animals.

Reviews

“[Just Fodder] brings a significant and imperative contribution for animal advocates (and/or activists), social scientists, philosophers and other academic sectors parties to think about and understand the animal-human relationship from a broader point-of-view. For animal lovers, animal activists or animal advocates who have (or don't have) relationships with animals, it is worth reading this book and thinking more profoundly about the ethical questions raised by the author.” The Vegan Society

“A beautifully crafted and argued work, and ultimately a deeply hopeful perspective on the possibilities for just human-animal relationships." Sue Donaldson, Queen's University and co-author of Zoopolis: A Political Theory of Animal Rights