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1 About This Book -- 1.1 How This Book Came into Existence -- 1.2 How This Book Contributes to the Literature -- 1.3 Who Might Find Value in This Book and How to Read This Book -- 1.4 How This Book is Structured -- 2 Preliminary Metareflections -- 2.1 On the Language Used in This Book and on Language and Animal Ethics in General -- 2.2 Metaethics -- 2.3 Ethical Principles -- 3 Historic and Current Discussions about Nonhuman Animal Rights - Welfarism vs. Abolitionism, Utilitarianism, Deontological Positions, Feminist Animal Ethics, and the Political Turn -- 4 Technological Innovation(,) and Moral Progress -- 4.1 From a Speciesist World to a Multispecies Society: How Technological Innovation Might Enable Moral Progress -- 4.2 Four Pillars of Nonhuman Animal Rights: Empathy, Justice, Inherent Value of Life, Knowledge -- 4.3 Moral Outrage and the Holocaust Analogy -- 5 Developing Declarations of Nonhuman Animal Rights -- 5.1 Why Do We Need Declarations of Nonhuman Animal Rights and How Could We Develop Them? -- 5.2 The Historical Emergence of Human Animal Rights -- 5.3 What Animal Ethics Can Learn from Disability Studies -- 5.3.1 The Argument of Species Overlap 6 Central Concepts: Needs, Capabilities, Interests, and Rights -- 6.1 Needs -- 6.2 Interests -- 6.3 Capabilities and Telos -- 6.3.1 Martha Nussbaum's Capability Approach -- 6.4 Interference in the Needs, Capabilities, and Interests of Sentient Beings -- 7 Imagining a Just Multispecies Society - May All Beings Be Happy and Free of Suffering? -- 8 Possible Future Universal Declarations of Nonhuman Animal Rights -- 8.1 Overview of the Articles -- 8.2 Article 1: All Individuals are Born Free and Equal in Dignity and Rights - On the Dignity of (Non)Human Animals, the Value of Life -- 8.3 Article 2: The Right to Life -- 8.3.1 But what about Plants? -- 9 The Empirical Status Quo of the Right to Life (in Austria) -- 10 Excursus: Norbert Hoerster, Nonhuman Animal Interests, and the Right to Life -- 11 Specific Rights in Nonhuman Animal Rights Declarations (Part 1) -- 11.1 Article 3: Right to Freedom -- 11.2 Article 4: Right to Safety/Physical Integrity; Prohibition of Torture -- 12 Specific Rights in Nonhuman Animal Rights Declarations (Part 2) -- 12.1 Article 5: Right to Recognition as a Person/(Legal) Subject Before the Law -- 12.1.1 Are There Nonhuman Animal Persons? The Concept of Personhood and its Ethical Relevance -- 12.1.2 The Great Ape Project by Cavalieri and Singer -- 12.1.3 Whale Rights -- 12.1.4 The Nonhuman Rights Project Around Steven M. Wise -- 13 Specific Rights in Nonhuman Animal Rights Declarations (Part 3) -- 13.1 Article 6: Right to a Human Guardian, a Legal Remedy, and an Indirect Right of Legal Action -- 13.1.1 The Case of Mathias Hiasl Pan -- 14 Specific Rights in Nonhuman Animal Rights Declarations (Part 4) -- 14.1 Article 7: Right to Love, Sexuality, Procreation, Pair-Building, Family, and Friendships -- 14.1.1 Right to Love, Sexuality, Procreation, Pair-Building, Family, and Friendships for Disabled Humans -- 14.1.2 Right to Love, Sexuality, Procreation, Pair-Building, Family, and Friendships for Nonhuman Animals -- 15 Specific Rights in Nonhuman Animal Rights Declarations (Part 5) -- 15.1 Article 8: Right to Property: Ownership, Stewardship, or Burning Down the Forest? -- 15.2 But What About Wild Animal Suffering? -- 16 Specific Rights in Nonhuman Animal Rights Declarations (Part 6) -- 16.1 Article 9: Right to Macropolitical Consideration and Micro-Political Participation -- 16.1.1 Political Consideration in the Macropolis -- 16.1.2 Political Participation in the Micropolis -- 17 Specific Rights in Nonhuman Animal Rights Declarations (Part 7) -- 17.1 Article 10: Right to Education -- 17.2 Article 11: Right to Work -- 17.3 Article 12: Right to an Adequate Standard of Living and to Certain Social Benefits (Protection in Case of Unemployment and Disability, Entitlement to Pension) -- 18 Conclusion and Outlook. |