Wild Things: Animal Rights in EU Conservation Law

Veerle Platvoet
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Abstract

Abstract The concept of animal rights is highly topical in animal legal scholarship. There is much debate on whether or not animals can and do hold rights, although there does seem to be consensus that animals currently do not have such legal rights that would grant them any foundational protection in the way that human rights do for humans. This article challenges that assumption through a discussion on the legal rights of wild animals under the European Union (EU) Habitats Directive. The article establishes a theoretical framework on animal rights and analyses the Habitats Directive according to the rights framework. It subsequently argues that preliminary fundamental legal rights for certain wild animals can be found in EU conservation law. However, through a discussion on the scope and objective of the Habitats Directive, the article finds that the legal rights that are found are not grounded in the interests of the animals themselves. Instead, the preliminary fundamental animal rights are a by-product of the anthropocentric value of biodiversity and do not support a rights-based approach to animal rights. The article concludes with a discussion on the interpretation that follows from these findings and how an instrument such as the Habitats Directive could implement rights-based wild animal rights.
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野生动物:欧盟动物保护法中的动物权利
摘要动物权利概念是动物法学研究的热点问题。关于动物是否能够并且确实拥有权利,存在很多争论,尽管似乎确实有共识,即动物目前没有这样的法律权利,不会像人权对人类那样给予它们任何基本的保护。本文通过讨论欧盟栖息地指令下野生动物的合法权利来挑战这一假设。本文建立了动物权利的理论框架,并根据权利框架对《栖息地指令》进行了分析。它随后辩称,某些野生动物的初步基本法律权利可以在欧盟保护法中找到。然而,通过对栖息地指令的范围和目的的讨论,文章发现,所发现的合法权利并没有以动物本身的利益为基础。相反,初步的基本动物权利是以人类为中心的生物多样性价值的副产品,并不支持以权利为基础的动物权利方法。文章最后讨论了从这些发现中得出的解释,以及《栖息地指令》等工具如何实现基于权利的野生动物权利。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Drawing upon the findings from island biogeography studies, Norman Myers estimates that we are losing between 50-200 species per day, a rate 120,000 times greater than the background rate during prehistoric times. Worse still, the rate is accelerating rapidly. By the year 2000, we may have lost over one million species, counting back from three centuries ago when this trend began. By the middle of the next century, as many as one half of all species may face extinction. Moreover, our rapid destruction of critical ecosystems, such as tropical coral reefs, wetlands, estuaries, and rainforests may seriously impair species" regeneration, a process that has taken several million years after mass extinctions in the past.
期刊最新文献
Lost in Translation? Why Outdated Notions of Normativity in International Law Explain Germany’s Failure to Give Effect to the Ramsar Convention of 1971 Wild Things: Animal Rights in EU Conservation Law Addressing Illegal Transnational Trade of Totoaba and Its Role in the Possible Extinction of the Vaquita Justice for Animals: Our Collective Responsibility Carceral Logics: Human Incarceration and Animal Captivity
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