Property, pain, and pastoral power: Animal experimentation and the review of the 1876 Cruelty to Animals Act, 1947-1965

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Abstract

paper, I analyze the first post-war review of the 1876 Cruelty to Animals Act, entitled the Littlewood Enquiry, 1947-1965. The Act regulated the practice of vivisection in Britain through the licensing of scientists and research establishments. It was during this review that experimental scientists, politicians and bureaucrats started to consider the welfare of nonhuman experimental animals, including recognizing that nonhuman laboratory animals can experience psychological as well as physical pain. This consideration of nonhuman animals as feeling beings was a turning point in animal experimentation law. It was the first time welfarist discourses became effusively subsumed into jurisprudential and scientific concerns, if not necessarily ubiquitously in practice (yet). I analyze this emergence of scientific-political discourses of care, and use Michel Foucault notion of Pastoral Power to demonstrate that a strategic shift in laboratory human-animal relations was necessary if animal experimentation was to continue. My argument is twofold: firstly, that pastoral power operated under the guise of animal welfare during the enquiry. Secondly, the property status of nonhuman animals helped to mediate and reinforce the relationship between this form of pastoralism (welfare) and the discourses circulating concerning nonhuman animals’ experiences of pain, their care, and treatment.
Original languageEnglish
Article number16
Pages (from-to)3-33
Number of pages31
JournalJournal for Critical Animal Studies
Volume16
Issue number2
Early online date1 Apr 2019
Publication statusPublished - May 2019

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