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Anthrozoology

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Subset of ethnobiology

Sled dog racing in Alaska

Anthrozoology, also known ashuman–animal studies (HAS), is the subset ofethnobiology that deals withinteractions betweenhumans and otheranimals. It is aninterdisciplinary field that overlaps with otherdisciplines includinganthropology,ethnology,medicine,psychology,social work,veterinary medicine, andzoology. A major focus of anthrozoologic research is the quantifying of the positive effects of human–animal relationships on either party and the study of theirinteractions.[1] It includes scholars from fields such as anthropology, sociology, biology, history and philosophy.[2][3][4]

Anthrozoology scholars, such asPauleen Bennett, recognize the lack of scholarly attention given to non-human animals in the past, and to the relationships between human and non-human animals, especially in the light of the magnitude of animal representations, symbols, stories and their actual physical presence in human societies. Rather than a unified approach, the field currently consists of several methods adapted from the several participating disciplines to encompass human–nonhuman animal relationships and occasional efforts to developsui generis methods.

Areas of study

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  • Theinteraction and enhancement withincaptive animal interactions.
  • Affective (emotional) or relationalbonds between humans and animals
  • Human perceptions and beliefs in respect of other animals
  • How some animals fit into human societies
  • How these vary between cultures, and change over times
  • The study ofanimal domestication: how and whydomestic animals evolved from wild species (paleoanthrozoology)[5]
  • Captivezoo animal bonds with keepers
  • The social construction of animals and what it means to be animal
  • The human–animal bond
  • Parallels between human–animal interactions and human–technology interactions
  • The symbolism of animals in literature and art
  • The history of animal domestication
  • The intersections ofspeciesism, racism, and sexism
  • The place of animals in human-occupied spaces
  • The religious significance of animals throughout human history
  • Exploring the cross-culturalethical treatment of animals
  • The critical evaluation ofanimal abuse and exploitation
  • Mind, self, andpersonhood in nonhuman animals
  • The potential human health benefits of companion animal ownership
  • Human–animal hybrids (where each cell has partly human and partly animal genetic contents)
  • Human–animal chimeras (where some cells are human and some cells are animal in origin)

Growth of the field

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There are currently 23 college programs in HAS or a related field in the United States, Canada, Great Britain, Germany, Israel and the Netherlands, as well as an additional eight veterinary school programs in North America, and over thirty HAS organizations in the US, Canada, Great Britain, Australia, France, Germany, New Zealand, Israel, Sweden, and Switzerland.

In the UK, theUniversity of Exeter runs an MA in Anthrozoology which explores human–animal interactions from anthropological (cross-cultural) perspectives. Human animal interactions (HAI) involving companion animals are also studied by theWaltham Centre for Pet Nutrition, which partners with the USNational Institutes of Health to research HAI in relation to child development and aging.[6]

There are now three primary lists for HAS scholars and students—H-Animal, the Human-Animal Studies listserv, and NILAS, as well as the Critical Animal Studies list.[clarification needed]

There are now over a dozen journals covering HAS issues, many of them founded in the last decade, and hundreds of HAS books, most of them published in the last decade (see for example,Humanimalia).Brill,Berg,Johns Hopkins,Purdue,Columbia,Reaktion,Palgrave-Macmillan,University of Minnesota,University of Illinois, andOxford all offer either a HAS series or a large number of HAS books.

In addition, in 2006,Animals & Society Institute (ASI) began hosting the Human-Animal Studies Fellowship, a six-week program in which pre- and post-doctoral scholars work on a HAS research project at a university under the guidance of host scholars and distance peer scholars. Beginning in 2011, ASI has partnered with Wesleyan Animal Studies, who will be hosting the fellowship in conjunction with ASI. There are also a handful of HAS conferences per year, including those organized by ISAZ and NILAS, and the Minding Animals conference, held in 2009 in Australia. Finally, there are more HAS courses being taught now than ever before. The ASI website lists over 300 courses (primarily in North America, but also including Great Britain, New Zealand, Australia, Germany, and Poland) in 29 disciplines at over 200 colleges and universities, not including over 100 law school courses.

Famous anthrozoologists

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See also

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References

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  1. ^Mills, Daniel S."Anthrozoology"Archived 2016-06-03 at theWayback Machine,The Encyclopedia of Applied Animal Behaviour and Welfare. CABI 2010, pp. 28–30.
  2. ^DeMello, Margo.Teaching the Animal: Human–Animal Studies Across the Disciplines. Lantern Books, 2010, p. xi. and Hurn, Samantha.Humans and Other Animals. Pluto Press, 2012.
  3. ^Animals & Society Institute.Archived June 25, 2013, at theWayback Machine Retrieved February 23, 2011.
  4. ^The term should not be confused with "animal studies", which often refers toanimal testing.
  5. ^College of Zoological Studies at London Hanover University - Paleoanthrozoology: Domestication of Species[1]Archived 2016-03-04 at theWayback Machine
  6. ^"Processes in Social & Affective Development: Human–Animal Interaction (HAI) Research".Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD). December 30, 2017.Archived from the original on April 23, 2018. RetrievedApril 7, 2018.

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