市政尾巴

Sean McCaskill
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摘要

这个项目考察了1880年到1909年间洛杉矶的市政动物管理。它从动物福利改革和渐进的国家扩张的汇合中追溯了市政动物控制的出现。美国的动物福利运动始于殖民时代,但很快就反映了欧洲态度的变化和内战后反虐待改革运动的兴起。当美国人试图在战争的废墟上创造一个更美好的世界时,许多人开始关注动物福利。这项运动首先发生在东海岸,始于1866年亨利·伯格(Henry Bergh)创立的美国防止虐待动物协会(ASPCA),并在本世纪末到达洛杉矶。在这个不断发展的城市里,许多人乐观地看待20世纪的曙光,希望洛杉矶能够跻身全国大都市之列。因此,他们开始以一种越来越进步的视角来看待这个城市的问题。自19世纪80年代以来,报纸就报道了动物扣押制度的残暴,但到19世纪末,它们戏剧性地揭露了动物收容所的残忍和腐败,强调了与更大的社会问题的联系。市民们,包括数量可观的女性,成为动物福利的积极分子。作为回应,市政府通过了一项法令,将动物管理权交给了私人动物福利组织人道动物联盟(Humane animal League)。当联盟无法人道有效地处理城市中迅速增长的动物数量时,城市承担起了动物管理的责任,并建立了一个市政系统。洛杉矶市动物管理机构的出现表明,洛杉矶市正转向在地方层面扩大国家权力,为其人类和动物居民创造一个更人道、更高效的世界。
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A Municipal Tail
This project examines municipal animal control in Los Angeles between 1880 and 1909. It traces the emergence of municipal animal control from the confluence of animal welfare reform and progressive state expansion. The animal welfare movement in the United States began in the Colonial Era, but soon reflected the influence of changing attitudes in Europe and the rise of anti-cruelty reform movements after the Civil War. As Americans sought to create a better world out of the ashes of that war, many looked towards animal welfare. This movement occurred first on the East Coast, beginning with Henry Bergh’s founding of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) in 1866, and reached Los Angeles by the end of the century. Many in that growing city viewed the dawn of the twentieth century with optimism, hoping for L.A.’s ascendancy into the ranks of the nation’s great metropolises. As a result, they began to look at the city’s problems through an increasingly progressive lens. Newspapers had covered the animal impoundment system’s brutality since the 1880s, but by the end of the century, they carried dramatic exposés of cruelties and corruption at the pound that emphasized connections to larger social issues. Citizens, including an impressive number of women, became activists for animal welfare. The municipal government responded by passing an ordinance that put animal control in the hands of the Humane Animal League, a private animal welfare organization. When the League failed to handle the city’s burgeoning animal population humanely and efficiently, the city assumed responsibility for animal control and created a municipal system. The emergence of municipal animal control in Los Angeles demonstrates a city turning to the extension of state power at the local level to create a more humane and efficient world for both its human and animal inhabitants.
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