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Animals as Crime Victims

Edited by: Lacey Levitt, David Rosengard, Jessica Rubin

ISBN13: 9781802209877
Published: February 2024
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £115.00



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This innovative and prescient book offers a multidisciplinary framework which reconceptualizes maltreated animals as crime victims. Articulating more active and involved responses to animal maltreatment, Animals as Crime Victims provides guidance to attorneys, law enforcement personnel, veterinarians, and educators by reimagining how animals are positioned within the law.

Lacey Levitt, David B. Rosengard, and Jessica Rubin bring together expert contributors from various fields who argue for reconceptualizing animals as crime victims and examine the legal ramifications of doing so. Chapters explore how recognition as crime victims not only makes animals and their own interests visible within the law but affords them substantive rights. Alongside a proposed legal framework, this incisive book details modern scientific discoveries regarding the complexity of animals'' cognition and emotions and the historical and contemporary sociological shifts in our relationships with animals.

Animals as Crime Victims will be a vital read for academics, students, and practitioners whose work focuses on animal maltreatment, animal law, or human-animal studies. Including in-depth examples, practical information, and exploration of substantive law alongside legal theory, this book will be useful to lawyers, law enforcement personnel, criminologists, and veterinary and mental health professionals confronting crimes against animals or the humans committing them.

Subjects:
Criminal Law, Animal Law
Contents:
Foreword xi
Douglas E. Beloof, J.D.
Introduction to Animals as Crime Victims: the importance of framing animals within criminal law and systems 1
Lacey Levitt, David Rosengard, Jessica Rubin

PART I. AN INTRODUCTION TO ANIMAL MALTREATMENT, THE LAW, AND CRIME VICTIMS’ RIGHTS
1. Defining animal maltreatment: historical and contemporary perspectives 10
Kathie L. Jenni
2. The legal history of animal protection in the United States 24
David S. Favre
3. The (human) victims’ rights movement in twenty-first century United States 41
Margaret Garvin

PART II. ARGUMENTS UNDERLYING THE RECLASSIFICATION OF ANIMALS AS CRIME VICTIMS
4. Advances in understanding cognition in animals 53
Lesley J. Rogers and Gisela Kaplan
5. The evolving role of animals in contemporary society 67
Lacey Levitt
6. The relationship between animal maltreatment and interpersonal violence 99
Brian J. Holoyda
7. Proposing a nonhuman animal victimology 114
Melanie Flynn

PART III. LEGAL ISSUES IN THE RECONCEPTUALIZATION OF ANIMALS AS CRIME VICTIMS
8. Applying crime victims’ rights to victims of animal maltreatment 133
David Rosengard
9. Insights from the nation’s first jurisdiction to statutorily permit court-appointed attorneys for justice in animal
cruelty cases 155
Jessica Rubin
10. Responding to animal cruelty and neglect in court: A prosecutor’s journey 166
Jake Kamins
11. Assigning animals crime victim status: opposing views and responses 180
Lora Dunn, Will Lowrey, Sherry Ramsey, David Rosengard, Lacey Levitt and Jessica Rubin

PART IV. RECONCEPTUALIZING ANIMALS AS CRIME VICTIMS: POLICY AND PRACTICE
12. Mental health professionals recognizing animals as victims 200
Mary Lou Randour
13. Preparing law enforcement to respond to animal victims 216
Virginia M. Maxwell and Cassandra L. Reyes
14. Preparing veterinarians to respond to animal victims: identifying and documenting physical harm 238
Martha Smith-Blackmore and Sheila Segurson
15. Preparing veterinarians to respond to animal victims: understanding and treating the behavioral consequences of maltreatment 255
Sheila Segurson and Martha Smith-Blackmore
16. Could “victimhood” be preventable? Opportunities in large-scale neglect 269
Gary Patronek