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Advancing Ethical Principles for Non-Invasive, Respectful Research with Nonhuman Animal Participants

Lauren Van Patter, Charlotte E. Blattner

2020Society and Animals35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Animal studies scholars are increasingly engaging with nonhuman animals firsthand to better understand their lifeworlds and interests. The current 3R framework is inadequate to guide respectful, non-invasive research relations that aim to encounter animals as meaningful participants and safeguard their well-being. This article responds to this gap by advancing ethical principles for research with animals guided by respect, justice, and reflexivity. It centers around three core principles: non-maleficence (including duties around vulnerability and confidentiality); beneficence (including duties around reciprocity and representation); and voluntary participation (involving mediated informed consent and ongoing embodied assent). We discuss three areas (inducements, privacy, and refusing research) that merit further consideration. The principles we advance serve as a starting point for further discussions as researchers across disciplines strive to conduct multispecies research that is guided by respect for otherness, geared to ensuring animals’ flourishing, and committed to a nonviolent ethic.

Topics & Concepts

BeneficenceReciprocity (cultural anthropology)Engineering ethicsFlourishingAutonomyVulnerability (computing)Research ethicsConfidentialityEconomic JusticeReflexivityAnimal ethicsPsychologyPolitical scienceSociologySocial psychologyLawSocial scienceEngineeringComputer scienceComputer securityHuman-Animal Interaction StudiesGeographies of human-animal interactionsAnimal testing and alternatives
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