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Animal Rights, Legal Personhood and Cognitive Capacity: Addressing ‘Levelling-Down’ Concerns

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-07-28, 14:55 authored by Joe Wills
This article considers objections to current litigation strategies of the US-based Nonhuman Rights Project (NhRP), which seek to extend legal personhood and liberty rights to nonhuman animals who possess ‘practical autonomy’. By tying personhood to intellectual abilities, so the objections go, such strategies endanger the present legal standing of humans with profound cognitive impairments. This article will argue that such cause for concern is largely misplaced for two reasons. First, the NhRP argue that practical autonomy is only a sufficient condition for personhood, not a necessary one. Second, drawing on theoretical and empirical literature, the article will argue that speciesism itself is a multiplier of oppressive theories, attitudes, beliefs and practices that negatively affect marginalized humans, including humans with cognitive impairments. The NhRP's attempts to reduce speciesism in the legal domain are thus hypothesized as being part of the solution to discrimination against marginalized humans, not as part of the problem.

History

Citation

Journal of Human Rights and the Environment, 2020, 11:2, pp. 199-223.

Author affiliation

School of Law

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of Human Rights and the Environment

Volume

11

Issue

2

Pagination

199-223

Publisher

Edward Elgar Publishing

issn

1759-7188

Acceptance date

2020-05-08

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2022-03-21

Language

en

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