News 
 National Rural News 
 Livestock 
 News 
 Lawyers bone up on animal protection 

Lawyers bone up on animal protection

30 Jul, 2010 10:22 AM
SUPPORTERS of tougher protections for animals are hoping strategic litigation will help change corporate behaviour and improve conditions for about 500 million farm animals in Australia each year.

Animal law is becoming an increasingly serious discipline as barristers and corporate law firms sign up for what many are calling the next big social movement, The Australian Financial Review reports.

Animal protection group Voiceless will begin a 12-lecture series on animal law next week spanning seven cities in 10 days, as growing consumer demand for more humanely produced food, clothing and products reliant on animal testing is forcing governments and large companies to institute animal-friendly policies.

Last week Coles announced it would phase out the sale of pork from sows reared in tiny metal stalls from next year, whil the Tasmanian government said last month it would ban the stalls by 2017. A federal review of food labelling law and policy, due to report in December, will assess the use of terms such as "free range", "corn fed" and "100 per cent natural" to sell products.

Print
Increase Text Size
Decrease Text Size


comments


Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Animals feel pain. They aren't robots with no feelings! Everyone needs love and not a life behind cages. Save lives, go vegan!
Posted by Annie, 31/07/2010 9:43:33 PM
The sharks are circling they can smell blood/money in the water.
Posted by Qlander, 1/08/2010 5:27:28 PM
It is great news that animal law will soon become a reality, this change is long overdue. The challenge that these lawyers face who will be helping to protect animals will be daunting. Millions of animals are subjected to cruelty on factory farms and this is perpetuated by the perceived need to produce cheap meat, but it is hiding large scale industrialised cruelty out of sight out of mind from the public. The farming industry's response is to pretend to the public that it is actually concerned about the animals it owns, but nothing could be further from the truth for they have a licence to do what they like to these animals. Applause to the lawyers who will defend the helpless who cannot speak for themselves.
Posted by Kathleen, 3/08/2010 4:51:17 PM

post a comment


Screen name  *
Email address  *
Remember me?
Comment  *
 
We invite and encourage our readers to post comments. Comments are moderated and will appear as soon as our editor has approved them. When posting comments you agree to be bound by our Terms and Conditions.
Related Coverage
ARTICLES
MULTIMEDIA
POLL
Q: What is the issue of most concern to you when deciding how to vote at this election?

Health
(13.2%)

Education
(3.2%)

Climate change
(11.5%)

Infrastructure
(18.1%)

Agricultural policy
(39.8%)

Other
(14.2%)

Total Votes: 620
Poll Date: 25 July, 2010

Most popular articles

ELDERS NEWS MREC FW



Stock & Land







Weather brought to you by:

Weatherzone

Classifieds

Front Page

Current Issue
Privacy Policy | Conditions of Use | Advertising Terms | Copyright © 2012. Fairfax Media.
 SEND...
 SAVE...
 SHARE...