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$25.32
101. Animal Rights (Library in a Book)
$0.62
102. Save the Animals: 101 Easy Things
$11.00
103. The Longest Struggle: Animal Advocacy
$53.44
104. Cockfight: Blood sport, Rooster,
$114.38
105. Exploring Animal Rights and Animal
$158.29
106. Managing the Behaviour of Animals

101. Animal Rights (Library in a Book)
by Lisa Yount
Hardcover: 304 Pages (2007-11-30)
list price: US$45.00 -- used & new: US$25.32
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Asin: 0816071306
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102. Save the Animals: 101 Easy Things You Can Do
by Ingrid Newkirk
Paperback: 192 Pages (1990-09)
list price: US$4.95 -- used & new: US$0.62
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Asin: 0446392340
Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars
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Product Description
The director of PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), the country's largest animal rights organization, offers practical strategies that will help protect the earth's animals. From eating less meat and dairy products to avoiding fur, leather and wool, to buying "cruelty free" products not tested on animals, here are 101 suggestions for ways everyone can make a difference. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (2)

2-0 out of 5 stars WARNING - not for children!!
someone gave us a whole bunch of used books over the weekend, and my kids were going to read this, so i picked it up to see what it was talking about...this book is BAD! in a way this book has too much gory details about animal cruelty, your kids will most likely get nightmares and refuse to eat meat afterward...

if a mature adult read it, it would perfectly fine, you can decide on your own future preference about animal cruelty... but for kids to get their hands on this book, it would be a big mistake!!

at least it should have a big warning sign saying PG-13 or something...

5-0 out of 5 stars INGRID - THE VOICE OF COMPASSION
Ingrid Newkirk's "You Can Save the Animals" is a must read if you care about justice and the hidden secrets of animal abusers."You Can Save the Animals" allows us to take a look behind those closeddoors to examine our ethics and morals.Ingrid brings knowledge of animalabuse to those uninformed, she exposes the facts many animal abusers wishto silence.We can ask ourselves, who and why would some wish the book notbe read?What would they have to gain or lose? Sue Schumacher ... Read more


103. The Longest Struggle: Animal Advocacy from Pythagoras to Peta
by Norm Phelps
Paperback: 367 Pages (2007-05-01)
list price: US$20.00 -- used & new: US$11.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1590561066
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

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From the first hominids who hunted wooly mammoths to today's factory farms and bio-engineering labs, The Longest Struggle tells the story of animal exploitation and the battle for animal justice. After describing the roots of animal rights in the ancient world, author Norm Phelps follows the development of animal protection through the Enlightenment, the anti-vivisection battles of the Victorian Era, and the birth of the modern animal rights movement with the publication of Peter Singer's Animal Liberation.

In a brisk, readable narrative, The Longest Struggle traces the campaigns of animal rights pioneers such as Henry Spira, Alex Hershaft, and Ingrid Newkirk, as well as leaders who have come more recently on the scene, such as Heidi Prescott, Karen Davis, and Bruce Friedrich.

Always grounding his story in its historical setting, Phelps describes the counterattack that the animal abuse industries launched in the 1990s and analyzes the controversies that have roiled the movement almost from the beginning, including "national groups vs. grass roots," "abolitionists vs. new welfareists," and activists who favor arson and intimidation vs. those who support only peaceful, legal forms of protest. The Longest Struggle concludes with an overview of current campaigns and tactics, and an assessment of the state of the movement as we enter a new century, including the threat represented by an overzealous "war on terror".

Thoroughly researched and annotated, The Longest Struggle reflects the author's two decades as an animal rights activist and his access to movement leaders who have shared with him their personal stories of campaigns that made animal rights history. At once an accessible history of animal protection thought and a revealing narrative of campaigns for animal rights, The Longest Struggle is must read material for everyone who wants to understand the most radical social justice movement of our time. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (3)

5-0 out of 5 stars Amazing writer!
I think I have read pretty much all the animal rights/vegetarian history published so far (e.g. Ryder, Animal Revolution; Spencer, Heretics' Feast; Stuart, Bloodless Revolution), and would rate The Longest Struggle as one of the best. Phelps is an original and thoughtful thinker, and a fantastic writer.

4-0 out of 5 stars The Challenge of Animal Activism
The Longest Struggle by Norm Phelps is dedicated to "the millions of animal advocates and caregivers around the world who labor in anonymity to relieve the suffering of the most defenseless of those who live at the mercy of our merciless societies."

Invoking Ralph Ellison's aphorism of racism - "I am an invisible man . . . I am invisible, understand, because people simply refuse to see me" - The Longest Struggle traces through history the evil of "invisibility" as it applies to animals: "we do not see the animals as they are: sensitive, intelligent, living beings who suffer and die at our hands with no hope of relief." Yet the challenge of animal activism - books written, organizations formed, arguments made, protests held, rescues undertaken, jail time served - is precisely to bring hope of relief and, beyond just hope of relief, Relief.

The Longest Struggle presents the historical struggle for animal protection and liberation through stages that are vividly evoked, starting with a philosophical or theological position held by a cluster of ancient thinkers - Pythagoras, Buddha, Hosea, and others - and moving towards a social consensus that "enforces compliance by custom and law." Western societies are now more or less in the consensus stage, though in most of the world, including ours, animals are as invisible - serving as mere reflectors of human appetites, desires and fears - as ever. Yet there is progress, despite the long, long road to go.

To help clarify the nature of the struggle, Phelps explains the difference between animal welfare and animal rights. Welfare advocates are concerned with our treatment of animals, whereas Rights advocates are concerned with our use of animals. Animal Welfare regards humans as superior to other animals and does not challenge our right to exploit animals, as long as we enslave, mutilate, and murder them "humanely." By contrast, Animal Rights/Liberation "challenges our right to use animals at all, arguing that animal exploitation is unjust and oppressive in the same way and for the same reasons that human exploitation is unjust and oppressive." Animal Rights/Liberation tends to reject the hierarchical model of human superiority and entitlement in favor of an egalitarian perspective. "Welfare," if accepted, is regarded as a means towards achieving animal liberation, an interim compromise, never the ultimate goal or solution.

Phelps, an ethical vegan, supports advancing animals' rights through a combination of incremental welfare reforms to reduce animal suffering in the here and now, such as banning cages in favor of cage-free confinement of hens used for egg production ("Cage free isn't cruelty free. But it is a lot better."), and abolitionist approaches, like banning outright the production of foie gras, in which ducks and geese are forcibly tube fed to fatten their livers to a diseased condition for gourmet appetizers.

Aspects of the conservative approach favored by Phelps, who condemns the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) and Stop Huntington Animal Cruelty (SHAC) - named for targeting the stockholders and employees of the notorious vivisection laboratory, Huntington Life Sciences - are debatable considering, for instance, that the violence of what he calls "a tiny, if very noisy, minority of animal activists" targets inanimate property and includes shame tactics like protesting at the homes of animal abusers, not physically assaulting them, whereas the conservative approach often encourages "humane" animal product consumerism, thereby creating whole new markets for animal products derived from, and concealing, pure violence.

If, as Phelps charges, SHAC and the ALF "are giving the animals' enemies a weapon with which to destroy the entire animal rights movement [government surveillance, arrests, imprisonment, `terrorist' accusations]," it may be argued as well that encouraging the public to support "humanely-raised" animal products, courting chefs who cook animals and restaurants that serve them battered, seasoned, whipped, baked, breaded and fried, subverts the effort to promote the dignity and visibility of animals, furthering the state of denial and prolonging the longest struggle.

In a letter to the Dalai Lama, in 2007, Phelps, who met with the Dalai Lama in 1998 to discuss a vegetarian diet as a Buddhist practice, expressed his deep disappointment in the Tibetan monk's relentless consumption of animal products at public events - braised calf's cheek, veal roast, stuffed pheasant breast, chicken soup, and other gluttonies - indeed, his refusal of vegetarian meals when they were offered to him. Phelps concludes his sorrowful and exasperated letter, "I am not going to ask you to change your behavior. I've been there, done that. We have a saying in America that `Anybody can talk the talk. What matters is do you walk the walk.' You can talk the talk with the best of them. But after twenty years, I can no longer pretend that everything is fine while I wait for you to walk the walk."

Karen Davis, PhD, President
United Poultry Concerns
Dedicated to the compassionate and respectful treatment of chickens and other domestic fowl. www.upc-online.org




5-0 out of 5 stars So good I've read it twice already
Laying the groundwork for this penetrating and thoroughly engaging survey of animal advocacy, Norm Phelps begins with the dawn of civilization, when humans began to enslave animals for food, clothing, sport and sacrifice. We witness millennia of profound abuse before any real advance is made in the interest of animals, though a few early voices of reason appear -- Jesus, for example, may have been history's first animal liberator.

The author brings his considerable experience as an activist and writer to bear here, introducing the reader to some of the movement's most fascinating activists and the campaigns they pioneered. His examination of campaign strategies includes those that did not fare so well -- and why. Phelps, who also wrote the excellent The Great Compassion: Buddhism and Animal Rights, has created a true page-turner here; indeed, I re-read the book again a month after reading it, just to absorb it all.

"The Longest Struggle" is a lively account of the evolution of animal protection, revealing how the movement has grown from the ideas of a few ancient philosophers to become one of the most influential forces of modern society. If you're looking for a comprehensive discussion of animal advocacy -- including its origins, strategies and controversies -- look no further.

~Mark Hawthorne, author of Striking at the Roots: A Practical Guide to Animal Activism
... Read more


104. Cockfight: Blood sport, Rooster, Gamecock, Breed, Wattle (anatomy), Aggression, Species, Wager, Sport, Animal welfare, Animal rights, Dog fighting
Paperback: 104 Pages (2009-12-10)
list price: US$58.00 -- used & new: US$53.44
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 6130250169
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Product Description
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! A cockfight is a blood sport between two roosters, held in a ring called a cockpit. Cockfighting is now illegal throughout the United States and in most of Europe. The combatants, known as gamecocks, are specially bred birds, conditioned for increased stamina and strength. The comb and wattle are cut off in order to meet show standards of the American Gamefowl Society and the Old English Game Club and to prevent freezing in colder climates. Cocks possess congenital aggression toward all males of the same species. Cocks are given the best of care until near the age of two years old. They are conditioned, much like professional athletes prior to events or shows. Wagers are often made on the outcome of the match. While not all fights are to the death, the cocks do endure physical trauma that may result in death. Cockfighting was at one time considered to be an accepted, traditional sporting event in the United States. In many other areas around the world, cockfighting is still practiced as a mainstream event; in some countries it is government controlled. ... Read more


105. Exploring Animal Rights and Animal Welfare: Using Animals for Clothing<br> Volume IV
by Lisa Trumbauer
Hardcover: 128 Pages (2002-09-30)
list price: US$32.00 -- used & new: US$114.38
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Asin: 031332249X
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106. Managing the Behaviour of Animals
by P. Monaghan, D.G.M. Wood-Gush
Hardcover: 272 Pages (1990-10-31)
list price: US$199.00 -- used & new: US$158.29
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0412299801
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Since man interacts with other animals at many different levels, using them as sources of food, raw materials, transport and companionship as well as competing with them for resources, how we manage their behaviour is of great importance. This book brings together a collection of reviews that deal with how an understanding of the methods, theories and facts provided by ethology (the scientific study of animal behaviour) can help us to manage the behaviour of animals. The book looks at this subject in such areas as improving productivity in agriculture and aquaculture, improving the welfare of captive animals, dealing with difficult pets, promoting the conservation of endangered species and finding humane solutions to deal with animal pests. The chapters discuss the theoretical background on which such work is based and provide a broad range of examples. This book illustrates that the modern science of ethology has an important contribution to make in solving the problems we face in managing animal behaviour. This book should be of interest to students on courses in animal behaviour and research workers in zoology, agriculture, veterinary science and psychology. ... Read more


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