Press release: 27 November 2006
100 Academics Support New Animal Ethics Centre
More than 100 academics from 10 countries have agreed to become Advisers to the new Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics –
launched online on Monday 27 November - at www.oxfordanimalethics.com - which aims to put animals on the intellectual
agenda.
The Centre is delighted to announce the support of Jeffrey Masson, Honorary Research Associate, Department of Philosophy
at University of Auckland, and looks forward to welcoming further support from New Zealand.
The Centre is the world’s first academy dedicated to the enhancement of the ethical status of animals through academic
publication, teaching and research. Academics world-wide from both the sciences and the humanities will be eligible to
become Fellows of the Centre. It will act as an international, independent think tank for the advancement of progressive
thought about animals.
One of the areas of research will be the relationship between animal abuse and violence to human beings. One of the
world’s major writers, who has explored this link - Nobel Laureate in Literature, Professor J. M. Coetzee – has honoured
the Centre by agreeing to become its first Honorary Fellow. Other projects being pursued include an online course in
animal ethics, a new monograph series, and a new Journal of Animal Ethics.
The Centre’s first director, Oxford theologian, the Revd Professor Andrew Linzey, said today: ‘The support of such a
large number of internationally recognised academics underlines just how important animals are as a moral issue’.
‘There is a strong rational case for animals, which has been recognised over the centuries by academics and
philosophers. What is needed is for this rational case to be much better known and there are now signs that progressive
thinking is becoming mainstream. Importantly, animals are now recognized as sentient beings in European law; and, in the
UK, the most comprehensive - and long overdue - overhaul of animal welfare legislation for almost a century has recently
passed into law.
'We must strive to ensure animal issues are highlighted and rationally discussed throughout society - we cannot change
the world for animals without changing our ideas about them. The Centre will promote ethical attitudes and contribute to
informed public debate.'
Professor Priscilla Cohn, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Penn State University, who is the Associate Director of
the Centre, added: ‘It seems to us that academics should take the lead in helping to foster a new kind of debate about
animals – one that goes beyond slogans and stereotypes’.
The Advisers and the first six Fellows are listed on the Centre’s website: www.oxfordanimalethics.com. The Centre is
named after the distinguished Spanish Philosopher, José Ferrater Mora, who courageously spoke out against bull-fighting
in Spain.
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Notes to Editors:
The Revd Professor Andrew Linzey is a Member of the Faculty of Theology, University of Oxford, and holds the world’s
first post in Ethics, Theology and Animal Welfare – the Bede Jarrett Senior Research Fellowship at Blackfriars Hall,
University of Oxford. He has written or edited 20 books, including Animal Theology (SCM Press/University of Illinois
Press, 1994) and Animal Rights: A Historical Anthology (Columbia University Press, 2005).
Professor Priscilla N. Cohn is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Abington College, Penn State University. She has
taught courses on animal ethics for 35 years, and lectured on five continents. Her books include Contraception in
Wildlife, Book 1 (Edwin Mellen Press, 1996) and Ethics and Wildlife (Edwin Mellen Press, 1999).
The first six Founding Fellows comprise three theologians, two philosophers, and one scientist from the UK, US,
Australia, Armenia and Canada: Professor Paul Ara Barsam (theologian at the University of Yerevan, Armenia), Professor
Mark Bernstein (philosopher at Purdue University, USA), Dr Scott Cowdell (theologian at Charles Sturt University and
Rector, St Paul's Anglican Church, Canberra, Australia), Professor Susan Pigott (Old Testament scholar at Hardin-Simmons
University, Abilene, Texas), Professor Mark Rowlands (philosopher at the University of Hertfordshire), and Professor
Martin Willison (biologist and environmentalist at Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada).
ENDS