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Animal–industrial complex

The term animal–industrial complex (AIC) refers to the systematic and institutionalized exploitation of animals. It includes every economic activity involving animals, such as the food industry (e.g., meat, dairy, poultry, apiculture), animal testing (e.g., academic, industrial, animals in space), medicine (e.g., bile and other animal products), clothing (e.g., leather, silk, wool, fur), labor and transport (e.g., working animals, animals in war, remote control animals), tourism and entertainment (e.g., circus, zoos, blood sports, trophy hunting, animals held in captivity), selective breeding (e.g., pet industry, artificial insemination), and so forth. Proponents of the term claim that activities described by the term differ from individual acts of animal cruelty in that they constitute institutionalized animal exploitation.

Pigs confined in gestation crates, which scholars such as Barbara Noske state is part of the animal–industrial complex. According to Noske, animals "have become reduced to mere appendages of computers and machines."[1]: 299 

Killing more than 200 billion land and aquatic animals every year, the AIC has been implicated in climate change, ocean acidification, biodiversity loss, and the Holocene extinction. It is also responsible for spreading of diseases from animals to humans, including the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Definitions

The term animal–industrial complex was coined by the Dutch cultural anthropologist and philosopher Barbara Noske in her 1989 book Humans and Other Animals, saying that animals "have become reduced to mere appendages of computers and machines."[1]: 299 [2]: 20  The term relates the practices, organizations, and overall industry that turns animals into food and other commodities to the military–industrial complex.[1]: xii, 298 

Richard Twine later refined the concept, regarding it as the "partly opaque and multiple set of networks and relationships between the corporate (agricultural) sector, governments, and public and private science. With economic, cultural, social and affective dimensions it encompasses an extensive range of practices, technologies, images, identities and markets."[3]: 23  Twine also discusses the overlap between the AIC and other similar complexes, such as the prison–industrial complex, entertainment–industrial complex, and pharmaceutical–industrial complex.[3]: 17–18  Sociologist David Nibert defines the animal–industrial complex as "a massive network that includes grain producers, ranching operations, slaughterhouse and packaging firms, fast food and chain restaurants, and the state," which he claims "has deep roots in world history."[4]: 197 

The AIC essentially refers to the triple helix of influential, powerful systems that control knowledge systems about meat production, namely, the government, the corporate sphere, and the academy.[5]

Origin and properties of the complex

Although the origin of the animal–industrial complex can be traced back to the time when domestication of animals began,[4]: 208  it was only since 1945 that the complex began to grow significantly under contemporary capitalism.[1]: 299 [4]: 208  Kim Stallwood claims that the animal–industrial complex is "an integral part of the neoliberal, transnational order of increasing privatization and decreasing government intervention, favouring transnational corporations and global capital."[1]: 299  According to Stallwood, two milestones mark the shift in human attitudes toward animals that empowered the animal–industrial complex, namely, Chicago and its stockyards and slaughterhouses from 1865 and the post–World War II developments such as intensive factory farms, industrial fishing, and xenotransplantation.[1]: 299–300  In the words of Nibert, the Chicago slaughterhouses were significant economic powers of the early 20th century and were "famous for the cruel, rapid-paced killing and disassembly of enormous numbers of animals."[4]: 200  To elucidate animal–industrial complex, Stallwood cites Upton Sinclair's 1906 novel The Jungle, which explicitly describes the mistreatment of animals during their lives until they end up at the slaughterhouse.[1]: 300  He also quotes Charles Patterson's Eternal Treblinka, which compares treatment of animals with the Holocaust and explains how the disassembly of animals in the slaughterhouses inspired Henry Ford's assembling of cars in factories and how it further influenced Nazi Germany in building concentration camps and gas chambers.[1]: 300 

 
In the slaughterhouse, Lovis Corinth, 1893

According to Stallwood, the animal–industrial complex breeds animals in the billions in order to make products and services for human consumption, and all these animals are considered legal property of the animal–industrial complex. The animal–industrial complex is said to have transformed the already confused relationship between human and non-human animals, significantly increasing the consumption and threatening human survival, and the pervasive nature of the animal–industrial complex is such that it evades attention.[1]: 299 

Nibert argues that while it has its origins in the use of animals during the establishment of agricultural societies, the animal–industrial complex is ultimately "a predictable, insidious outgrowth of the capitalist system with its penchant for continuous expansion". According to Nibert, this complex is so destructive in its pursuit of resources such as land and water to rear all of these animals as a source of profit that it warrants comparisons to Attila the Hun. As the human population grows to a projected 9 billion by the middle of the century, meat production is expected to increase by 40%.[4]: 208  Nibert further states,

The profound cultural devaluation of other animals that permits the violence that underlies the animal industrial complex is produced by far-reaching speciesist socialization. For instance, the system of primary and secondary education under the capitalist system largely indoctrinates young people into the dominant societal beliefs and values, including a great deal of procapitalist and speciesist ideology. The devalued status of other animals is deeply ingrained; animals appear in schools merely as caged "pets," as dissection and vivisection subjects, and as lunch. On television and in movies, the unworthiness of other animals is evidenced by their virtual invisibility; when they do appear, they generally are marginalized, vilified, or objectified. Not surprisingly, these and numerous other sources of speciesism are so ideologically profound that those who raise compelling moral objections to animal oppression largely are dismissed, if not ridiculed.[4]: 208 

Contributors to the 2013 book Animals and War, which linked critical animal studies and critical peace studies,[6] explored the connections between the animal–industrial complex and the military–industrial complex, proposing and analysing the idea of a military-animal industrial complex.[7]: 16  The exploitation of animals, argues Colin Salter, is not necessary to military–industrial complexes, but it is a foundational and central element of the military–industrial complex as it actually exists.[7]: 20  One of the aims of the book as a whole was to argue for the abolition of the military-animal industrial complex and all wars.[6]: 120 

Relationship with speciesism

Piers Beirne considers speciesism as the ideological anchor of the intersecting networks of the animal–industrial complex, such as factory farms, vivisection, hunting and fishing, zoos and aquaria, wildlife trade, and so forth.[8] Amy J. Fitzgerald and Nik Taylor argue that the animal–industrial complex is both a consequence and cause of speciesism, which according to them is a form of discrimination similar to racism or sexism.[9] They also argue that the obfuscation of meat's animal origins is a critical part of the animal–industrial complex under capitalist and neoliberal regimes.[9] Speciesism results in the belief that humans have the right to use non-human animals, which is so pervasive in the modern society.[9]

Scholars argue that all kinds of animal production is rooted in speciesism, reducing animals to mere economic resources.[10]: 422  Built on the production and slaughter of animals, the animal–industrial complex is perceived as the materialization of the institution of speciesism, with speciesism becoming "a mode of production."[10]: 422  In his 2011 book Critical Theory and Animal Liberation, J. Sanbonmatsu argues that speciesism is not ignorance or the absence of a moral code towards animals, but is a mode of production and material system imbricated with capitalism.[10]: 420 

Components of the complex

 

The animal–industrial complex involves commodification of animals under contemporary capitalism and includes every economic activity involving animals, such as food, animal research, entertainment, fashion, companionship, and so forth,[11] all of which are seen as consequences of animal exploitations.[10]: 421  The AIC is implicated in animal agribusiness and its networks, or the agro-industrial complex (which includes animal agriculture, the meat and dairy industries, factory farms, poultry, apiculture, aquaculture, and the like),[10]: 422 [12][13] intersecting with various other industrial complexes that involves exploitation of animals, such as the pharmaceutical–industrial complex,[4]: 207 [10]: 422  medical–industrial complex,[4]: 207 [14]: xvi–xvii  vivisection–industrial complex,[15] cosmetic–industrial complex, entertainment–industrial complex,[10]: 422  academic–industrial complex,[10]: 422 [14]: xvi–xvii  security–industrial complex,[14]: xvi–xvii  prison–industrial complex,[10]: 422 [14]: xvi–xvii  and so forth.

Philosopher Steven Best explains that all these industrial complexes interrelate with and reinforce the AIC by "exploiting the nonhuman animal slaves" of the AIC.[14]: xvi–xvii  For instance, the academic–industrial complex conducts research for the medical–industrial complex and Big Pharma by exploiting animals of the AIC in universities, military, and private vivisection laboratories and producing questionable research financed by the pharmaceutical–industrial complex for pharmaceutical capital.[14]: xvi–xvii  These drugs, which according to Best are dubiously researched, are then patented, fast-tracked into market sales with the help of the Food and Drug Administration, and advertised through the media–industrial complex.[14]: xvii  Best estimates that up to 115 million animals are killed globally every year to produce these drugs, which force human victims to succumb to the medical–industrial complex for profit by treating only the symptoms.[14]: xvii  Any dissent by animal rights activists is criminalized by the security–industrial complex, which incarcerates many of the dissenters in the prison–industrial complex.[14]: xvii  Twine considers the AIC as a significant component of the broader global food system.[3]: 14 

Impact of the complex

 
Male chicks prepared to be killed

Referring to the animal–industrial complex intersectionally, both Noske and Twine acknowledge the complex's negative impact on human minorities and the environment.[16]: 62  According to Kathleen Stachowski, the AIC "naturalizes the human as a consumer of other animals."[17] The enormity of the AIC, according to Stachowski, includes "its long reach into our lives, and how well it has done its job normalizing brutality toward the animals whose very existence is forgotten."[17] She states that the corporate dairy industry, the government, and schools forms the animal–industrial complex troika of immense influence, which hides from the public's view the animal rights violations and cruelties happening within the dairy industry.[17] Scholars note that while critical animal theory acknowledges the universities' position as centers of knowledge production, it also states that the academy plays a problematic role of being a crucial mechanism within the AIC.[16]: 62 

Borrowing from Dwight D. Eisenhower's military–industrial complex warning, Stachowski states that the vast and powerful AIC determines what children eat because people have failed to "guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence" and that Eisenhower's parallels are strikingly similar to the AIC in that the complex involves "the very structure of our society" and completely influences the society's economic, political, and even spiritual spheres.[17] Stachowski also states that the troika "hijacks" schoolchildren by promoting milk in the K-12 nutrition education curriculum and making them "eat the products of industrial animal production."[17]

A part of the AIC,[18] animal agriculture has been implicated in environmental harms including climate change, ocean acidification, biodiversity loss, and the killing of more than 60 billion non-human land animals annually,[19] ultimately contributing to the Holocene extinction, the only anthropogenic of all the mass extinctions in the planet's history.[20] This number excludes aquatic animals killed for food and non-food uses, which amounts to about 103.6 billion annually, and also male chicks killed in the egg industry, marine animals killed as bycatch, and dogs and cats eaten in Asia.[21] All told, around 166 to over 200 billion land and aquatic animals are killed every year to provide humans with animal products for consumption, which some vegans and animal rights activists, among them Steven Best and journalist Chris Hedges, have described as an "animal holocaust".[21][22]: 29–32, 97 [23] In the US alone, over 20 million farm animals die during transport to slaughterhouses annually.[24] The extensive use of land and other resources for the production of meat instead of grain for human consumption is a leading cause of malnutrition, hunger, and famine around the world.[4]: 204 

 
Dead infant pigs at a hog farm

Animal research and vivisection, another component of the AIC, is responsible to the immense suffering of hundreds of millions of nonhuman animals annually, and the deaths of at least 115 million animals.[14][15][21]: 45  While the public is increasingly aware of this, chiefly due to animal advocacy, testaments of scientists, and growing direct evidence, the AIC lobbies against animal welfare regulation and animal rights activism.[15]

Scholars argue that the animal–industrial complex is also responsible for spreading of diseases from animals to humans[4]: 198 [8][25] such as the spread of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (mad cow disease) owing to beef consumption,[25] and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.[8][26] whose origin can be traced to the wet markets in China.[27][28][29] According to Charlotte Blattner et al., the COVID-19 crisis revealed the AIC as "a vast and unstoppable machinery."[26]: 247  Carol J. Adams considers responses to such crises as representing "a search for anthropocentric solutions to an anthropocentric problem"—that is, improve the supply of meat rather than examine the practice of meat eating—and stresses a closer scrutiny of the problem and a possible rejection of meat eating.[25]

Commodification of nonhuman animals

One of the primary impacts of the animal–industrial complex is the commodification of nonhuman animals. In the book Education for Total Liberation, Meneka Repka cites Barbara Noski as saying that the commodification of nonhuman animals in food systems is directly linked to capitalist systems that prioritize "monopolistically inclined financial interests" over the well-being of humans, nonhumans, and the environment.[30] Richard Twine furthers this stating that "corporate influences have had a direct interest through marketing, advertising, and flavour manipulation in constructing the consumption of animal products as a sensual material pleasure."[30]

Writing about wild animals being imported into France in the 18th century, historian Louise Robbins writes that a "cultural biography of things" would show animals "sliding in and out of commodity status and taking on different values for different people" as they make their way from their homes to the streets of Paris.[31]: 10  Sociologist Rhoda Wilkie has used the term "sentient commodity" to describe this view of how the conception of animals as commodities can shift depending on whether a human being forms a relationship with them.[32] Geographers Rosemary-Claire Collard and Jessica Dempsey use the term "lively commodities."[33]

Political scientist Sami Torssonen argues that animal welfare has itself been commodified since the 1990s because of public concern for animals. "Scientifically-certified welfare products," which Torssonen calls "sellfare," are "producible and salable at various points in the commodity chain," subject to competition like any other commodity.[34] Social scientist Jacy Reese Anthis argues that, while there is no immanent right for animals or humans to not be commodified, there are strong practical reasons to oppose any commodification of animals, not just that which is cruel or egregious.[35]

Exploitation of humans

Scholars state that throughout history the oppression of exploited animals supported the oppression and exploitation of humans, and vice versa.[4]: 198  The resulting change from one form of the control of state power to another, such as the older aristocracy being replaced by rising capitalism, was "every bit as violent and oppressive" as the former.[4]: 198  The state-supported profit-driven capitalist expansion, for instance, was responsible for the killing and displacement of North America's indigenous peoples and animals.[4]: 199  The creation of ranching operations led to intrusions onto Native American lands and violent displacement of the people in them in order to accommodate the growing numbers of oppressed animals, which in turn resulted in the creation of slaughterhouse operations.[4]: 199  These slaughterhouses grew by exploiting vulnerable workforces, chiefly immigrants, who were undernourished, over-worked, poorly housed, and frequently sick, owing to the "macabre" nature of work as a result of the "assembly-line-style carnage" worsened by "the deafening squeals, bellows and bleating of terrified animals" being slaughtered.[4]: 199  Starting in the 1980s, large food companies including Cargill, Conagra Brands, Tyson Foods moved most slaughterhouse operations to rural areas of the Southern United States which were more hostile to unionization efforts.[4]: 205  In the Brazilian Amazon, around 25,000 people are working as virtual slaves for cattle ranchers.[36]

In her book, Noske discusses the issue of health risks to human workers in slaughterhouses.[3]: 16  Amy J. Fitzgerald points out to prison inmates in the United States and Canada being employed as a source of cheap labor in slaughtering and processing of animals, which scholars such as Robert R. Higgins consider as "environmental racism" wherein animals and animalized humans are symbolically paired, and as an economic rationale for the perpetuation of a specific prison population. According to Fitzgerald, this suggests a tendency toward psycho-social brutalization in such labor, which in turn jeopardize inmate rehabilitation.[3]: 17 

Negative effects on workers

American slaughterhouse workers are three times more likely to suffer serious injury than the average American worker.[37] NPR reports that pig and cattle slaughterhouse workers are nearly seven times more likely to suffer repetitive strain injuries than average.[38] The Guardian reports that on average there are two amputations a week involving slaughterhouse workers in the United States.[39] On average, one employee of Tyson Foods, the largest meat producer in America, is injured and amputates a finger or limb per month.[40] The Bureau of Investigative Journalism reported that over a period of six years, in the UK 78 slaughter workers lost fingers, parts of fingers or limbs, more than 800 workers had serious injuries, and at least 4,500 had to take more than three days off after accidents.[41] In a 2018 study in the Italian Journal of Food Safety, slaughterhouse workers are instructed to wear ear protectors to protect their hearing from the constant screams of animals being killed.[42] A 2004 study in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine found that "excess risks were observed for mortality from all causes, all cancers, and lung cancer" in workers employed in the New Zealand meat processing industry.[43]

The worst thing, worse than the physical danger, is the emotional toll. If you work in the stick pit [where hogs are killed] for any period of time—that let's [sic] you kill things but doesn't let you care. You may look a hog in the eye that's walking around in the blood pit with you and think, 'God, that really isn't a bad looking animal.' You may want to pet it. Pigs down on the kill floor have come up to nuzzle me like a puppy. Two minutes later I had to kill them - beat them to death with a pipe. I can't care.

— Gail A. Eisnitz, [44]

The act of slaughtering animals, or of raising or transporting animals for slaughter, may engender psychological stress or trauma in the people involved.[45][46][47][48][49][50][51][52][53][54][55] A 2016 study in Organization indicates, "Regression analyses of data from 10,605 Danish workers across 44 occupations suggest that slaughterhouse workers consistently experience lower physical and psychological well-being along with increased incidences of negative coping behavior".[56] In her thesis submitted to and approved by University of Colorado, Anna Dorovskikh states that slaughterhouse workers are "at risk of Perpetration-Induced Traumatic Stress, which is a form of posttraumatic stress disorder and results from situations where the concerning subject suffering from PTSD was a causal participant in creating the traumatic situation".[57] A 2009 study by criminologist Amy Fitzgerald indicates, "slaughterhouse employment increases total arrest rates, arrests for violent crimes, arrests for rape, and arrests for other sex offenses in comparison with other industries".[58] As authors from the PTSD Journal explain, "These employees are hired to kill animals, such as pigs and cows that are largely gentle creatures. Carrying out this action requires workers to disconnect from what they are doing and from the creature standing before them. This emotional dissonance can lead to consequences such as domestic violence, social withdrawal, anxiety, drug and alcohol abuse, and PTSD".[59]

Slaughterhouses in the United States commonly illegally employ and exploit underage workers and illegal immigrants.[60][61] In 2010, Human Rights Watch described slaughterhouse line work in the United States as a human rights crime.[62] In a report by Oxfam America, slaughterhouse workers were observed not being allowed breaks, were often required to wear diapers, and were paid below minimum wage.[63]

See also

References

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  57. ^ Dorovskikh, Anna (2015). Killing for a Living: Psychological and Physiological Effects of Alienation of Food Production on Slaughterhouse Workers (BSc). University of Colorado, Boulder.
  58. ^ Fitzgerald, A. J.; Kalof, L. (2009). "Slaughterhouses and Increased Crime Rates: An Empirical Analysis of the Spillover From "The Jungle" Into the Surrounding Community". Organization & Environment. 22 (2): 158–184. doi:10.1177/1350508416629456. S2CID 148368906.
  59. ^ "The Psychological Damage of Slaughterhouse Work". PTSDJournal. Retrieved 23 May 2019.
  60. ^ Waldman, Peter (29 December 2017). "America's Worst Graveyard Shift Is Grinding Up Workers". Bloomberg Businessweek. Retrieved 23 May 2019.
  61. ^ Grabell, Michael (1 May 2017). "Exploitation and Abuse at the Chicken Plant". The New Yorker. Retrieved 23 May 2019.
  62. ^ "Rights on the Line". 11 December 2010. Retrieved 23 May 2019.
  63. ^ Grabell, Michael. "Live on the Live". Oxfam America. Retrieved 23 May 2019.

Further reading

  • Matsuoka, Atsuko; Sorenson, John (2018). Critical Animal Studies: Towards Trans-species Social Justice. Rowman and Littlefield International—Intersections series. London: Rowman & Littlefield International. ISBN 978-1-78660-647-1.
  • Nibert, David, ed. (2017). Animal Oppression and Capitalism. Praeger Publishing. ISBN 978-1440850738.
  • Nocella II, Anthony J.; Sorenson, John; Socha, Kim; Matsuoka, Atsuko (2014). Defining Critical Animal Studies: An Intersectional Social Justice Approach for Liberation. Institute for Critical Animal Studies. Bern: Peter Lang. ISBN 978-1-4331-2136-4. ISSN 1058-1634
  • Taylor, Nik; Twine, Richard (2014). The rise of Critical Animal Studies. From the Margins to the Centre. Routledge Advances in Sociology. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781138125919.

animal, industrial, complex, term, animal, industrial, complex, refers, systematic, institutionalized, exploitation, animals, includes, every, economic, activity, involving, animals, such, food, industry, meat, dairy, poultry, apiculture, animal, testing, acad. The term animal industrial complex AIC refers to the systematic and institutionalized exploitation of animals It includes every economic activity involving animals such as the food industry e g meat dairy poultry apiculture animal testing e g academic industrial animals in space medicine e g bile and other animal products clothing e g leather silk wool fur labor and transport e g working animals animals in war remote control animals tourism and entertainment e g circus zoos blood sports trophy hunting animals held in captivity selective breeding e g pet industry artificial insemination and so forth Proponents of the term claim that activities described by the term differ from individual acts of animal cruelty in that they constitute institutionalized animal exploitation Pigs confined in gestation crates which scholars such as Barbara Noske state is part of the animal industrial complex According to Noske animals have become reduced to mere appendages of computers and machines 1 299 Killing more than 200 billion land and aquatic animals every year the AIC has been implicated in climate change ocean acidification biodiversity loss and the Holocene extinction It is also responsible for spreading of diseases from animals to humans including the ongoing COVID 19 pandemic Contents 1 Definitions 2 Origin and properties of the complex 2 1 Relationship with speciesism 3 Components of the complex 4 Impact of the complex 4 1 Commodification of nonhuman animals 4 2 Exploitation of humans 4 2 1 Negative effects on workers 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingDefinitions EditThe term animal industrial complex was coined by the Dutch cultural anthropologist and philosopher Barbara Noske in her 1989 book Humans and Other Animals saying that animals have become reduced to mere appendages of computers and machines 1 299 2 20 The term relates the practices organizations and overall industry that turns animals into food and other commodities to the military industrial complex 1 xii 298 Richard Twine later refined the concept regarding it as the partly opaque and multiple set of networks and relationships between the corporate agricultural sector governments and public and private science With economic cultural social and affective dimensions it encompasses an extensive range of practices technologies images identities and markets 3 23 Twine also discusses the overlap between the AIC and other similar complexes such as the prison industrial complex entertainment industrial complex and pharmaceutical industrial complex 3 17 18 Sociologist David Nibert defines the animal industrial complex as a massive network that includes grain producers ranching operations slaughterhouse and packaging firms fast food and chain restaurants and the state which he claims has deep roots in world history 4 197 The AIC essentially refers to the triple helix of influential powerful systems that control knowledge systems about meat production namely the government the corporate sphere and the academy 5 Origin and properties of the complex EditAlthough the origin of the animal industrial complex can be traced back to the time when domestication of animals began 4 208 it was only since 1945 that the complex began to grow significantly under contemporary capitalism 1 299 4 208 Kim Stallwood claims that the animal industrial complex is an integral part of the neoliberal transnational order of increasing privatization and decreasing government intervention favouring transnational corporations and global capital 1 299 According to Stallwood two milestones mark the shift in human attitudes toward animals that empowered the animal industrial complex namely Chicago and its stockyards and slaughterhouses from 1865 and the post World War II developments such as intensive factory farms industrial fishing and xenotransplantation 1 299 300 In the words of Nibert the Chicago slaughterhouses were significant economic powers of the early 20th century and were famous for the cruel rapid paced killing and disassembly of enormous numbers of animals 4 200 To elucidate animal industrial complex Stallwood cites Upton Sinclair s 1906 novel The Jungle which explicitly describes the mistreatment of animals during their lives until they end up at the slaughterhouse 1 300 He also quotes Charles Patterson s Eternal Treblinka which compares treatment of animals with the Holocaust and explains how the disassembly of animals in the slaughterhouses inspired Henry Ford s assembling of cars in factories and how it further influenced Nazi Germany in building concentration camps and gas chambers 1 300 In the slaughterhouse Lovis Corinth 1893 According to Stallwood the animal industrial complex breeds animals in the billions in order to make products and services for human consumption and all these animals are considered legal property of the animal industrial complex The animal industrial complex is said to have transformed the already confused relationship between human and non human animals significantly increasing the consumption and threatening human survival and the pervasive nature of the animal industrial complex is such that it evades attention 1 299 Nibert argues that while it has its origins in the use of animals during the establishment of agricultural societies the animal industrial complex is ultimately a predictable insidious outgrowth of the capitalist system with its penchant for continuous expansion According to Nibert this complex is so destructive in its pursuit of resources such as land and water to rear all of these animals as a source of profit that it warrants comparisons to Attila the Hun As the human population grows to a projected 9 billion by the middle of the century meat production is expected to increase by 40 4 208 Nibert further states The profound cultural devaluation of other animals that permits the violence that underlies the animal industrial complex is produced by far reaching speciesist socialization For instance the system of primary and secondary education under the capitalist system largely indoctrinates young people into the dominant societal beliefs and values including a great deal of procapitalist and speciesist ideology The devalued status of other animals is deeply ingrained animals appear in schools merely as caged pets as dissection and vivisection subjects and as lunch On television and in movies the unworthiness of other animals is evidenced by their virtual invisibility when they do appear they generally are marginalized vilified or objectified Not surprisingly these and numerous other sources of speciesism are so ideologically profound that those who raise compelling moral objections to animal oppression largely are dismissed if not ridiculed 4 208 Contributors to the 2013 book Animals and War which linked critical animal studies and critical peace studies 6 explored the connections between the animal industrial complex and the military industrial complex proposing and analysing the idea of a military animal industrial complex 7 16 The exploitation of animals argues Colin Salter is not necessary to military industrial complexes but it is a foundational and central element of the military industrial complex as it actually exists 7 20 One of the aims of the book as a whole was to argue for the abolition of the military animal industrial complex and all wars 6 120 Relationship with speciesism Edit Main article Speciesism Piers Beirne considers speciesism as the ideological anchor of the intersecting networks of the animal industrial complex such as factory farms vivisection hunting and fishing zoos and aquaria wildlife trade and so forth 8 Amy J Fitzgerald and Nik Taylor argue that the animal industrial complex is both a consequence and cause of speciesism which according to them is a form of discrimination similar to racism or sexism 9 They also argue that the obfuscation of meat s animal origins is a critical part of the animal industrial complex under capitalist and neoliberal regimes 9 Speciesism results in the belief that humans have the right to use non human animals which is so pervasive in the modern society 9 Scholars argue that all kinds of animal production is rooted in speciesism reducing animals to mere economic resources 10 422 Built on the production and slaughter of animals the animal industrial complex is perceived as the materialization of the institution of speciesism with speciesism becoming a mode of production 10 422 In his 2011 book Critical Theory and Animal Liberation J Sanbonmatsu argues that speciesism is not ignorance or the absence of a moral code towards animals but is a mode of production and material system imbricated with capitalism 10 420 Components of the complex Edit Forced gavage feeding of mulard duck in the production of foie gras The animal industrial complex involves commodification of animals under contemporary capitalism and includes every economic activity involving animals such as food animal research entertainment fashion companionship and so forth 11 all of which are seen as consequences of animal exploitations 10 421 The AIC is implicated in animal agribusiness and its networks or the agro industrial complex which includes animal agriculture the meat and dairy industries factory farms poultry apiculture aquaculture and the like 10 422 12 13 intersecting with various other industrial complexes that involves exploitation of animals such as the pharmaceutical industrial complex 4 207 10 422 medical industrial complex 4 207 14 xvi xvii vivisection industrial complex 15 cosmetic industrial complex entertainment industrial complex 10 422 academic industrial complex 10 422 14 xvi xvii security industrial complex 14 xvi xvii prison industrial complex 10 422 14 xvi xvii and so forth Philosopher Steven Best explains that all these industrial complexes interrelate with and reinforce the AIC by exploiting the nonhuman animal slaves of the AIC 14 xvi xvii For instance the academic industrial complex conducts research for the medical industrial complex and Big Pharma by exploiting animals of the AIC in universities military and private vivisection laboratories and producing questionable research financed by the pharmaceutical industrial complex for pharmaceutical capital 14 xvi xvii These drugs which according to Best are dubiously researched are then patented fast tracked into market sales with the help of the Food and Drug Administration and advertised through the media industrial complex 14 xvii Best estimates that up to 115 million animals are killed globally every year to produce these drugs which force human victims to succumb to the medical industrial complex for profit by treating only the symptoms 14 xvii Any dissent by animal rights activists is criminalized by the security industrial complex which incarcerates many of the dissenters in the prison industrial complex 14 xvii Twine considers the AIC as a significant component of the broader global food system 3 14 Impact of the complex EditSee also Holocaust analogy in animal rights Male chicks prepared to be killed Referring to the animal industrial complex intersectionally both Noske and Twine acknowledge the complex s negative impact on human minorities and the environment 16 62 According to Kathleen Stachowski the AIC naturalizes the human as a consumer of other animals 17 The enormity of the AIC according to Stachowski includes its long reach into our lives and how well it has done its job normalizing brutality toward the animals whose very existence is forgotten 17 She states that the corporate dairy industry the government and schools forms the animal industrial complex troika of immense influence which hides from the public s view the animal rights violations and cruelties happening within the dairy industry 17 Scholars note that while critical animal theory acknowledges the universities position as centers of knowledge production it also states that the academy plays a problematic role of being a crucial mechanism within the AIC 16 62 Borrowing from Dwight D Eisenhower s military industrial complex warning Stachowski states that the vast and powerful AIC determines what children eat because people have failed to guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence and that Eisenhower s parallels are strikingly similar to the AIC in that the complex involves the very structure of our society and completely influences the society s economic political and even spiritual spheres 17 Stachowski also states that the troika hijacks schoolchildren by promoting milk in the K 12 nutrition education curriculum and making them eat the products of industrial animal production 17 A part of the AIC 18 animal agriculture has been implicated in environmental harms including climate change ocean acidification biodiversity loss and the killing of more than 60 billion non human land animals annually 19 ultimately contributing to the Holocene extinction the only anthropogenic of all the mass extinctions in the planet s history 20 This number excludes aquatic animals killed for food and non food uses which amounts to about 103 6 billion annually and also male chicks killed in the egg industry marine animals killed as bycatch and dogs and cats eaten in Asia 21 All told around 166 to over 200 billion land and aquatic animals are killed every year to provide humans with animal products for consumption which some vegans and animal rights activists among them Steven Best and journalist Chris Hedges have described as an animal holocaust 21 22 29 32 97 23 In the US alone over 20 million farm animals die during transport to slaughterhouses annually 24 The extensive use of land and other resources for the production of meat instead of grain for human consumption is a leading cause of malnutrition hunger and famine around the world 4 204 Dead infant pigs at a hog farm Animal research and vivisection another component of the AIC is responsible to the immense suffering of hundreds of millions of nonhuman animals annually and the deaths of at least 115 million animals 14 15 21 45 While the public is increasingly aware of this chiefly due to animal advocacy testaments of scientists and growing direct evidence the AIC lobbies against animal welfare regulation and animal rights activism 15 Scholars argue that the animal industrial complex is also responsible for spreading of diseases from animals to humans 4 198 8 25 such as the spread of bovine spongiform encephalopathy mad cow disease owing to beef consumption 25 and the ongoing COVID 19 pandemic 8 26 whose origin can be traced to the wet markets in China 27 28 29 According to Charlotte Blattner et al the COVID 19 crisis revealed the AIC as a vast and unstoppable machinery 26 247 Carol J Adams considers responses to such crises as representing a search for anthropocentric solutions to an anthropocentric problem that is improve the supply of meat rather than examine the practice of meat eating and stresses a closer scrutiny of the problem and a possible rejection of meat eating 25 Commodification of nonhuman animals Edit Main article Commodity status of animals One of the primary impacts of the animal industrial complex is the commodification of nonhuman animals In the book Education for Total Liberation Meneka Repka cites Barbara Noski as saying that the commodification of nonhuman animals in food systems is directly linked to capitalist systems that prioritize monopolistically inclined financial interests over the well being of humans nonhumans and the environment 30 Richard Twine furthers this stating that corporate influences have had a direct interest through marketing advertising and flavour manipulation in constructing the consumption of animal products as a sensual material pleasure 30 Writing about wild animals being imported into France in the 18th century historian Louise Robbins writes that a cultural biography of things would show animals sliding in and out of commodity status and taking on different values for different people as they make their way from their homes to the streets of Paris 31 10 Sociologist Rhoda Wilkie has used the term sentient commodity to describe this view of how the conception of animals as commodities can shift depending on whether a human being forms a relationship with them 32 Geographers Rosemary Claire Collard and Jessica Dempsey use the term lively commodities 33 Political scientist Sami Torssonen argues that animal welfare has itself been commodified since the 1990s because of public concern for animals Scientifically certified welfare products which Torssonen calls sellfare are producible and salable at various points in the commodity chain subject to competition like any other commodity 34 Social scientist Jacy Reese Anthis argues that while there is no immanent right for animals or humans to not be commodified there are strong practical reasons to oppose any commodification of animals not just that which is cruel or egregious 35 Exploitation of humans Edit Scholars state that throughout history the oppression of exploited animals supported the oppression and exploitation of humans and vice versa 4 198 The resulting change from one form of the control of state power to another such as the older aristocracy being replaced by rising capitalism was every bit as violent and oppressive as the former 4 198 The state supported profit driven capitalist expansion for instance was responsible for the killing and displacement of North America s indigenous peoples and animals 4 199 The creation of ranching operations led to intrusions onto Native American lands and violent displacement of the people in them in order to accommodate the growing numbers of oppressed animals which in turn resulted in the creation of slaughterhouse operations 4 199 These slaughterhouses grew by exploiting vulnerable workforces chiefly immigrants who were undernourished over worked poorly housed and frequently sick owing to the macabre nature of work as a result of the assembly line style carnage worsened by the deafening squeals bellows and bleating of terrified animals being slaughtered 4 199 Starting in the 1980s large food companies including Cargill Conagra Brands Tyson Foods moved most slaughterhouse operations to rural areas of the Southern United States which were more hostile to unionization efforts 4 205 In the Brazilian Amazon around 25 000 people are working as virtual slaves for cattle ranchers 36 In her book Noske discusses the issue of health risks to human workers in slaughterhouses 3 16 Amy J Fitzgerald points out to prison inmates in the United States and Canada being employed as a source of cheap labor in slaughtering and processing of animals which scholars such as Robert R Higgins consider as environmental racism wherein animals and animalized humans are symbolically paired and as an economic rationale for the perpetuation of a specific prison population According to Fitzgerald this suggests a tendency toward psycho social brutalization in such labor which in turn jeopardize inmate rehabilitation 3 17 Negative effects on workers Edit Further information Labor rights in American meatpacking industry American slaughterhouse workers are three times more likely to suffer serious injury than the average American worker 37 NPR reports that pig and cattle slaughterhouse workers are nearly seven times more likely to suffer repetitive strain injuries than average 38 The Guardian reports that on average there are two amputations a week involving slaughterhouse workers in the United States 39 On average one employee of Tyson Foods the largest meat producer in America is injured and amputates a finger or limb per month 40 The Bureau of Investigative Journalism reported that over a period of six years in the UK 78 slaughter workers lost fingers parts of fingers or limbs more than 800 workers had serious injuries and at least 4 500 had to take more than three days off after accidents 41 In a 2018 study in the Italian Journal of Food Safety slaughterhouse workers are instructed to wear ear protectors to protect their hearing from the constant screams of animals being killed 42 A 2004 study in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine found that excess risks were observed for mortality from all causes all cancers and lung cancer in workers employed in the New Zealand meat processing industry 43 The worst thing worse than the physical danger is the emotional toll If you work in the stick pit where hogs are killed for any period of time that let s sic you kill things but doesn t let you care You may look a hog in the eye that s walking around in the blood pit with you and think God that really isn t a bad looking animal You may want to pet it Pigs down on the kill floor have come up to nuzzle me like a puppy Two minutes later I had to kill them beat them to death with a pipe I can t care Gail A Eisnitz 44 The act of slaughtering animals or of raising or transporting animals for slaughter may engender psychological stress or trauma in the people involved 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 A 2016 study in Organization indicates Regression analyses of data from 10 605 Danish workers across 44 occupations suggest that slaughterhouse workers consistently experience lower physical and psychological well being along with increased incidences of negative coping behavior 56 In her thesis submitted to and approved by University of Colorado Anna Dorovskikh states that slaughterhouse workers are at risk of Perpetration Induced Traumatic Stress which is a form of posttraumatic stress disorder and results from situations where the concerning subject suffering from PTSD was a causal participant in creating the traumatic situation 57 A 2009 study by criminologist Amy Fitzgerald indicates slaughterhouse employment increases total arrest rates arrests for violent crimes arrests for rape and arrests for other sex offenses in comparison with other industries 58 As authors from the PTSD Journal explain These employees are hired to kill animals such as pigs and cows that are largely gentle creatures Carrying out this action requires workers to disconnect from what they are doing and from the creature standing before them This emotional dissonance can lead to consequences such as domestic violence social withdrawal anxiety drug and alcohol abuse and PTSD 59 Slaughterhouses in the United States commonly illegally employ and exploit underage workers and illegal immigrants 60 61 In 2010 Human Rights Watch described slaughterhouse line work in the United States as a human rights crime 62 In a report by Oxfam America slaughterhouse workers were observed not being allowed breaks were often required to wear diapers and were paid below minimum wage 63 See also EditAg gag Animal liberation Concentrated animal feeding operation List of industrial complexes Live export Meat industry Meat packing industry World Scientists Warning to HumanityReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i Sorenson John 2014 Critical Animal Studies Thinking the Unthinkable Toronto Ontario Canada Canadian Scholars Press ISBN 978 1 55130 563 9 Retrieved 7 October 2018 Noske Barbara 1989 Humans and Other Animals Beyond the Boundaries of Anthropology Pluto Press ISBN 978 18 530 5054 1 a b c d e Twine Richard 2012 Revealing the animal industrial complex A concept amp method for Critical Animal Studies Journal for Critical Animal Studies 10 1 12 39 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Nibert David 2011 Origins and Consequences of the Animal Industrial Complex In Steven Best Richard Kahn Anthony J Nocella II Peter McLaren eds The Global Industrial Complex Systems of Domination Rowman amp Littlefield pp 197 209 ISBN 978 0739136980 Twine Richard 2010 Animals as Biotechnology Ethics Sustainability and Critical Animal Studies Science in Society Series New York Earthscan Routledge p 17 ISBN 978 1 84407 830 1 a b Nocella Anthony J 2014 A critical animal and peace studies argument to ending all wars In Salter Colin Nocella Anthony J Bentley Judy K C eds Animals and War Lanham Lexington Books a b Salter Colin 2014 Introducing the military animal industrial complex In Salter Colin Nocella Anthony J Bentley Judy K C eds Animals and War Lanham Lexington Books a b c Beirne Piers May 2021 Wildlife Trade and COVID 19 Towards a Criminology of Anthropogenic Pathogen Spillover The British Journal of Criminology Oxford University Press 61 3 607 626 doi 10 1093 bjc azaa084 ISSN 1464 3529 PMC 7953978 Retrieved 19 September 2021 a b c Fitzgerald Amy J Taylor Nik 2014 The cultural hegemony of meat and the animal industrial complex In Nik Taylor Richard Twine eds The Rise of Critical Animal Studies 1 ed Routledge doi 10 4324 9780203797631 ISBN 978 0 20379 763 1 a b c d e f g h i Dinker Karin Gunnarsson Pedersen Helena 2016 Critical Animal Pedagogies Re learning Our Relations with Animal Others In Helen E Lees Nel Noddings eds The Palgrave International Handbook of Alternative Education 1 ed London Palgrave Macmillan pp 415 430 doi 10 1057 978 1 137 41291 1 27 ISBN 978 1 137 41290 4 Arcari Paula May 2020 Disconnection amp Demonisation COVID 19 Shows Why We Need to Stop Commodifying All Animals Social Sciences amp Humanities Open doi 10 2139 ssrn 3599772 S2CID 225822910 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Porter Pete 2018 The Personal as Political in the Animal Industrial Complex Society amp Animals Brill 26 5 545 550 doi 10 1163 15685306 12341563 ISSN 1568 5306 S2CID 150332354 Retrieved 23 September 2021 Nimmo Richie Spring 2015 The Bio Politics of Bees Industrial Farming and Colony Collapse Disorder PDF Humanimalia A Journal of Human Animal Interface Studies 6 2 Retrieved 23 September 2021 a b c d e f g h i j Best Steven 2011 Introduction Pathologies of Power and the Rise of the Global Industrial Complex In Steven Best Richard Kahn Anthony J Nocella II Peter McLaren eds The Global Industrial Complex Systems of Domination Rowman amp Littlefield pp ix xxv ISBN 978 0739136980 a b c Nuria Almiron and Natalie Khazaal 2016 Lobbying against compassion Speciesist Discourse in the Vivisection Industrial Complex American Behavioral Scientist SAGE Journals 60 3 256 275 doi 10 1177 0002764215613402 ISSN 0002 7642 S2CID 147298407 Retrieved 10 August 2021 a b Thirukkumaran Meneka Rosanna 2017 The V Word An Inquiry into Vegan Student Experience in Calgarian Schools p 62 PDF PRISM University of Calgary s Digital Repository University of Calgary doi 10 11575 PRISM 28421 hdl 11023 3739 Retrieved 29 August 2021 a b c d e Stachowski Kathleen 12 June 2012 The Animal Industrial Complex The Monster in Our Midst Britannica com Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 10 August 2021 If the idea of an animal industrial complex seemed a bit outlandish maybe even a little paranoid to anyone a few paragraphs back perhaps now not so much Boscardin Livia 12 July 2016 Greenwashing the Animal Industrial Complex Sustainable Intensification and Happy Meat 3rd ISA Forum of Sociology Vienna Austria ISAConf confex com Retrieved 10 August 2021 Steinfeld Henning Gerber Pierre Wassenaar Tom Castel Vincent Rosales Mauricio de Haan Cees 2006 Livestock s Long Shadow Environmental Issues and Options PDF Rome FAO Ripple WJ Wolf C Newsome TM Galetti M Alamgir M Crist E Mahmoud MI Laurance WF 13 November 2017 World Scientists Warning to Humanity A Second Notice PDF BioScience 67 12 1026 1028 doi 10 1093 biosci bix125 hdl 11336 71342 Moreover we have unleashed a mass extinction event the sixth in roughly 540 million years wherein many current life forms could be annihilated or at least committed to extinction by the end of this century a b c Benatar David 2015 The Misanthropic Argument for Anti natalism In S Hannan S Brennan R Vernon eds Permissible Progeny The Morality of Procreation and Parenting Oxford University Press p 44 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199378111 003 0002 ISBN 978 0199378128 Best Steven 2014 The Politics of Total Liberation Revolution for the 21st Century Palgrave Macmillan doi 10 1057 9781137440723 ISBN 978 1137471116 Hedges Chris August 3 2015 A Haven From the Animal Holocaust Truthdig Retrieved August 29 2021 Kevany Sophie June 15 2022 More than 20 million farm animals die on way to abattoir in US every year The Guardian Retrieved June 16 2022 a b c Adams Carol J 1997 Mad Cow Disease and the Animal Industrial Complex An Ecofeminist Analysis Organization amp Environment SAGE Publications 10 1 26 51 doi 10 1177 0921810697101007 JSTOR 26161653 S2CID 73275679 Retrieved 7 September 2021 a b Blattner Charlotte Coulter Kendra Wadiwel Dinesh Kasprzycka Eva 2021 Covid 19 and Capital Labour Studies and Nonhuman Animals A Roundtable Dialogue Animal Studies Journal University of Wollongong 10 1 240 272 doi 10 14453 asj v10i1 10 ISSN 2201 3008 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Sun J He WT Wang L Lai A Ji X Zhai X et al May 2020 COVID 19 Epidemiology Evolution and Cross Disciplinary Perspectives Trends in Molecular Medicine 26 5 483 495 doi 10 1016 j molmed 2020 02 008 PMC 7118693 PMID 32359479 WHO Points To Wildlife Farms In Southern China As Likely Source Of Pandemic NPR 15 March 2021 Maxmen A April 2021 WHO report into COVID pandemic origins zeroes in on animal markets not labs Nature 592 7853 173 174 Bibcode 2021Natur 592 173M doi 10 1038 d41586 021 00865 8 PMID 33785930 S2CID 232429241 a b Repka Meneka 2019 Nocella Ii Anthony J Drew Carolyn George Amber E Ketenci Sinem Lupinacci John Purdy Ian Leeson Schatz Joe eds Education for Total Liberation Critical Animal Pedagogy and Teaching Against Speciesism Radical Animal Studies and Total Liberation 1 ed New York Peter Lang doi 10 3726 b14204 ISBN 978 1 4331 5789 9 S2CID 240272942 Robbins Louise E 1998 Elephant slaves and pampered parrots Exotic animals and their meanings in eighteenth century France Madison University of Wisconsin Madison p 10 Wilkie Rhoda M 2010 Livestock Deadstock Working with Farm Animals from Birth to Slaughter Philadelphia Temple University Press pp 115 128 ISBN 978 1 59213 648 3 Collard Rosemary Claire Dempsey Jessica 2013 Life for Sale The Politics of Lively Commodities Environment and Planning A Economy and Space SAGE Journals 45 11 2682 2699 doi 10 1068 a45692 ISSN 1472 3409 S2CID 143733165 Retrieved 11 September 2021 Torssonen Sami Fall 2015 Sellfare A History of Livestock Welfare Commodification as Governance Humanimalia 71 1 ISSN 2151 8645 Retrieved 12 September 2021 Reese Jacy 16 November 2018 There s no such thing as humane meat or eggs Stop kidding yourself The Guardian Retrieved 17 May 2020 Nibert David 2013 Animal Oppression and Human Violence Domesecration Capitalism and Global Conflict Columbia University Press p 226 ISBN 978 0231151894 Gillespie Kathryn 2015 Animal Oppression amp Human Violence Domesecration Capitalism and Global Conflict The AAG Review of Books Taylor amp Francis LLC Association of American Geographers 3 2 66 67 doi 10 1080 2325548x 2015 1015914 ISSN 2325 548X S2CID 154641458 Meatpacking Occupational Safety and Health Administration Retrieved 23 May 2019 Lowe Peggy 11 August 2016 Working The Chain Slaughterhouse Workers Face Lifelong Injuries National Public Radio Retrieved 23 May 2019 Two amputations a week the cost of working in a US meat plant The Guardian 5 July 2018 Retrieved 23 May 2019 Lewis Cora 18 February 2018 America s Largest Meat Producer Averages One Amputation Per Month Buzzfeed News Retrieved 23 May 2019 Revealed Shocking safety record of UK meat plants The Bureau of Investigative Journalism 29 July 2018 Retrieved 23 May 2019 Francesca Iulietto Maria Sechi Paola 3 July 2018 Noise assessment in slaughterhouses by means of a smartphone app Italian Journal of Food Safety 7 2 7053 doi 10 4081 ijfs 2018 7053 PMC 6036995 PMID 30046554 McLean D Cheng S June 2004 Mortality and cancer incidence in New Zealand meat workers Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 61 6 541 547 doi 10 1136 oem 2003 010587 PMC 1763658 PMID 15150395 Eisnitz Gail A 1997 Slaughterhouse The Shocking Story of Greed Neglect And Inhumane Treatment Inside the U S Meat Industry Prometheus Books Sheep farmer who felt so guilty about driving his lambs to slaughter rescues them and becomes a vegetarian The Independent 30 January 2019 Retrieved 30 January 2019 Victor Karen Barnard Antoni 20 April 2016 Slaughtering for a living A hermeneutic phenomenological perspective on the well being of slaughterhouse employees International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well being 11 30266 doi 10 3402 qhw v11 30266 PMC 4841092 PMID 27104340 Working The Chain Slaughterhouse Workers Face Lifelong Injuries Npr org Retrieved 30 January 2019 Anna Dorovskikh Theses Killing for a Living Psychological and Physiological Effects of Alienation of Food Production on Slaughterhouse Workers Scholar colorado edu Retrieved 30 January 2019 PTSD in the Slaughterhouse The Texas Observer 7 February 2012 Retrieved 30 January 2019 Newkey Burden Chas 19 November 2018 There s a Christmas crisis going on no one wants to kill your dinner Chas Newkey Burden The Guardian Retrieved 30 January 2019 Psychological Distress Among Slaughterhouse Workers Warrants Further Study SPH Boston University School of Public Health Retrieved 30 January 2019 Dillard Jennifer September 2007 A Slaughterhouse Nightmare Psychological Harm Suffered by Slaughterhouse Employees and the Possibility of Redress through Legal Reform ResearchGate net Retrieved 30 January 2019 S Serina hu 2 March 2018 I couldn t look them in the eye Farmer who couldn t slaughter his cows is turning his farm vegan Inews co uk Retrieved 30 January 2019 Fox Katrina Meet The Former Livestock Agent Who Started An International Vegan Food Business Forbes com Retrieved 30 January 2019 Lebwohl Michael 25 January 2016 A Call to Action Psychological Harm in Slaughterhouse Workers The Yale Global Health Review Retrieved 23 May 2019 Baran B E Rogelberg S G Clausen T 2016 Routinized killing of animals Going beyond dirty work and prestige to understand the well being of slaughterhouse workers Organization 23 3 351 369 doi 10 1177 1350508416629456 S2CID 148368906 Dorovskikh Anna 2015 Killing for a Living Psychological and Physiological Effects of Alienation of Food Production on Slaughterhouse Workers BSc University of Colorado Boulder Fitzgerald A J Kalof L 2009 Slaughterhouses and Increased Crime Rates An Empirical Analysis of the Spillover From The Jungle Into the Surrounding Community Organization amp Environment 22 2 158 184 doi 10 1177 1350508416629456 S2CID 148368906 The Psychological Damage of Slaughterhouse Work PTSDJournal Retrieved 23 May 2019 Waldman Peter 29 December 2017 America s Worst Graveyard Shift Is Grinding Up Workers Bloomberg Businessweek Retrieved 23 May 2019 Grabell Michael 1 May 2017 Exploitation and Abuse at the Chicken Plant The New Yorker Retrieved 23 May 2019 Rights on the Line 11 December 2010 Retrieved 23 May 2019 Grabell Michael Live on the Live Oxfam America Retrieved 23 May 2019 Further reading EditMatsuoka Atsuko Sorenson John 2018 Critical Animal Studies Towards Trans species Social Justice Rowman and Littlefield International Intersections series London Rowman amp Littlefield International ISBN 978 1 78660 647 1 Nibert David ed 2017 Animal Oppression and Capitalism Praeger Publishing ISBN 978 1440850738 Nocella II Anthony J Sorenson John Socha Kim Matsuoka Atsuko 2014 Defining Critical Animal Studies An Intersectional Social Justice Approach for Liberation Institute for Critical Animal Studies Bern Peter Lang ISBN 978 1 4331 2136 4 ISSN 1058 1634 Taylor Nik Twine Richard 2014 The rise of Critical Animal Studies From the Margins to the Centre Routledge Advances in Sociology New York Routledge ISBN 9781138125919 Portals Animals Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Animal industrial complex amp oldid 1134380399, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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