2015 Voiceless Animal Law Lecture Series

For ten years, the annual Voiceless Animal Law Lecture Series hosted international leaders in animal law to share their expertise. Going forward, this ground-breaking series will continue online to discuss the latest developments in animal law worldwide, to inspire and educate animal advocates.

Beyond the Cage

A huge legal wall separates humans from all other animals. On one side of the wall sit humans who are considered legal ‘persons’ and are bearers of a number of  legal rights. Nonhuman animals are on the wrong side of the wall where they are considered mere ‘things’, unable to possess any legal rights such as the right to freedom from captivity or torture.

To present this topic Voiceless proudly welcomed the President of NhRP Professor Steven Wise as keynote speaker. The Nonhuman Rights Project (NhRP) argues that the legal division between humans and nonhuman animals is indiscriminate and irrational. Rather than being pre-determined by species, NhRP claim that the granting of legal personhood should be based on cognitive ability – human or otherwise. On this basis, the NhRP have embarked on three strategic lawsuits in New York State in an attempt to liberate four chimpanzees held in wrongful captivity.

The 2015 Series explored NhRP’s work to revolutionise the way the law considers nonhuman animals. Learn more about the topic here.

Watch the 2015 Animal Law Lecture Series keynote presentation.

Voiceless’s special thanks go to our travel partner Executive Edge for supporting our travel arrangements for the 2015 Voiceless Animal Law Lecture Series.

  • Join the Voiceless Community

    For academics, advocates, teachers and students, animal lovers, animal lawyers and everyone in between!
    Sign up below to learn more about our Voiceless Grants Program, our free library of resources on Animal Protection Education and Animal Law Education and other Voiceless related tidbits.

  • This field is hidden when viewing the form
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.