Abstract
In the European Union (EU) innovation society, animal welfare has reached its
normative status, together with the increased ethical concerns of citizens and civil
society in relation to animal welfare and dignity. However, several problems are
impeding welfarism from gaining full traction on the European stage.This paper aims
at scrutinizing some of those legal problems, using the ongoing (2019) CAP reform and
labelling issues as case studies. Is the process of the CAP reform in line with the aim of
fully integrating farm animal welfare into EU agricultural policy? Is animal welfare
labelling gaining ground as an ethical-legal tool that certifies the achievement of high
standards in livestock farming? These are the questions explored in this contribution.
Both a historical perspective of farm animal welfare in Europe and an evaluation at
the international level willenrich their analysis.Thecore argument of this study posits
that legal answers to the CAP post-2020 and to animal welfare labelling schemes can
legitimate a more sustainable model of EU agriculture. What is needed is a model of
agricultural practices capable of aligning citizens' interests with the EU animal
welfarestrategy 2012-2015, whileenhancing and strengthening the Union's normative
approach to animal dignity.
Lingua originale | English |
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pagine (da-a) | 47-84 |
Numero di pagine | 38 |
Rivista | European Journal of Legal Studies |
Volume | 12 |
DOI | |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 2020 |
Keywords
- Animal welfare