Links

AUSTRALIA

Animal law groups

Animals Australia
Voiceless
Barristers Animal Welfare Panel
Law Society of NSW Animal Law Committee
Brisbane Lawyers Educating and Advocating for Tougher Sentences (BLEATS)
Activist Rights Online Resource

Animal rights/welfare organisations

Animals Australia
Animal Liberation (Victoria)
RSPCA
Choose Cruelty Free
Humane Society International (Australia)
World Wildlife Fund Australia
Medical Advances without Animals (MAWA)
Replace Animals in Australian Testing
World League for Protection of Animals (Australia)
Vets Beyond Borders

 

INTERNATIONAL

Resources and Information

Animal Law Resource Center
Animal Legal & Historical Web Center (USA)
The Animal Concerns Community
International Institute for Animal Law
Journal of International Wildlife Law & Policy
Animal Law Review
Center for Animal Law Studies (USA)

Animal law groups

Animal Rights Legal Advocacy Network (NZ)
Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF) (USA)
Harvard University SALDF (student chapter of the Animal Legal Defense Fund)
Animal Rights Law (Rutgers University) (USA)
Meyer & Glitzenstein law firm (USA)
The Great Ape Project (International)

Animal rights/welfare organisations

World Animal Protection
World Animal Net (International)
International Fund for Animal Welfare
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (USA)
Friends of Animals ((International)
Compassion in World Farming (International)
Farm Animal Rights Movement (USA)
Doctors and Lawyers for Responsible Medicine (International)
Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) (USA)

If you know of an organisation we should be linking to, please contact us.

Mulesing

Mulesing is performed annually on over 20 million Australian Merino lambs. It involves taking a crescent-shaped slice of skin (5-7 cm) from either buttock (the ‘breach’) of a sheep, without anaesthetic, and results in abnormal behaviour for up to three days.

Despite industry’s promise to phase-out mulesing by 2010, many retailers throughout Europe have boycotted Australian wool due to overwhelming consumer concern.

More humane alternatives to surgical mulesing, such as intradermal injections prompting fleece to fall away from the breach (permanently) through a process of necrosis, are currently not receiving the support they require from Australia’s wool industry.


THE LAW

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