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The Emergence and Development of Animal Research Ethics: A Review with a Focus on Nonhuman Primates

Garðar Árnason

2020Science and Engineering Ethics30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The ethics of using nonhuman animals in biomedical research is usually seen as a subfield of animal ethics. In recent years, however, the ethics of animal research has increasingly become a subfield within research ethics under the term "animal research ethics". Consequently, ethical issues have become prominent that are familiar in the context of human research ethics, such as autonomy or self-determination, harms and benefits, justice, and vulnerability. After a brief overview of the development of the field and a discussion of relevant theoretical ethical frameworks, I consider two of these issues, namely autonomy and self-determination on the one hand, and harms and benefits on the other hand. My concern is with philosophical and ethical issues, rather than animal research oversight. I focus my discussion on nonhuman primates, as the most plausible nonhuman candidates for this approach. I conclude that the approach, although promising, depends strongly on the moral status of nonhuman research subjects.

Topics & Concepts

Animal ethicsAutonomyResearch ethicsEngineering ethicsPhilosophy of scienceContext (archaeology)Applied ethicsNonhuman primateVulnerability (computing)Economic JusticeMeta-ethicsNursing ethicsPsychologyEnvironmental ethicsSociologyPolitical scienceEpistemologyBiologyLawPhilosophyEvolutionary biologyComputer securityEngineeringComputer sciencePaleontologyAnimal testing and alternativesEthics in Clinical ResearchBiomedical Ethics and Regulation
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