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Neo-republicanism as a framework for a political theory of animal protection - An evaluation of Philip Pettit’s neo-republican theory of freedom and its potential for extending justice to non-human animals

Hansen, Martin LU (2022) STVM25 20221
Department of Political Science
Abstract
Non-human animals are often excluded from contemporary political theories, much to their detriment in terms of welfare and protection. The ‘political turn’ is a subset of animal ethicists concerned with moving beyond motivating moral status and instead discussing the politics of a shared human-animal society. This thesis evaluates Philip Pettit’s neo-republicanism as a theoretical framework for a political theory of animal protection. Focusing on whether or not neo-republican theory is able to extend its conception of justice to non-human animals, this thesis consists of a qualitative text analysis of Pettit’s writings on non-human animals and assesses his principles in accordance with reflective equilibrium strategy. After taking Pettit’s... (More)
Non-human animals are often excluded from contemporary political theories, much to their detriment in terms of welfare and protection. The ‘political turn’ is a subset of animal ethicists concerned with moving beyond motivating moral status and instead discussing the politics of a shared human-animal society. This thesis evaluates Philip Pettit’s neo-republicanism as a theoretical framework for a political theory of animal protection. Focusing on whether or not neo-republican theory is able to extend its conception of justice to non-human animals, this thesis consists of a qualitative text analysis of Pettit’s writings on non-human animals and assesses his principles in accordance with reflective equilibrium strategy. After taking Pettit’s theory at face value as well as modifying it with the addition of empowered proxy agents able to represent the interests of non-human animals, this thesis shows that neo-republicanism is more often than not incompatible with our considered judgments. The results suggest that in order to accommodate justice for non-human animals, Pettit would have to alter or abandon major parts of his theory. Finally, this thesis offers thought for further research and points future inquiries into the relationship between political theory and non-human animals towards alternate ideals of animal protection. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Hansen, Martin LU
supervisor
organization
course
STVM25 20221
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
animal rights, Neo-republicanism, analytical political theory, reflective equilibrium, political turn
language
English
id
9080304
date added to LUP
2022-07-03 09:00:25
date last changed
2022-07-03 09:00:25
@misc{9080304,
  abstract     = {{Non-human animals are often excluded from contemporary political theories, much to their detriment in terms of welfare and protection. The ‘political turn’ is a subset of animal ethicists concerned with moving beyond motivating moral status and instead discussing the politics of a shared human-animal society. This thesis evaluates Philip Pettit’s neo-republicanism as a theoretical framework for a political theory of animal protection. Focusing on whether or not neo-republican theory is able to extend its conception of justice to non-human animals, this thesis consists of a qualitative text analysis of Pettit’s writings on non-human animals and assesses his principles in accordance with reflective equilibrium strategy. After taking Pettit’s theory at face value as well as modifying it with the addition of empowered proxy agents able to represent the interests of non-human animals, this thesis shows that neo-republicanism is more often than not incompatible with our considered judgments. The results suggest that in order to accommodate justice for non-human animals, Pettit would have to alter or abandon major parts of his theory. Finally, this thesis offers thought for further research and points future inquiries into the relationship between political theory and non-human animals towards alternate ideals of animal protection.}},
  author       = {{Hansen, Martin}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Neo-republicanism as a framework for a political theory of animal protection - An evaluation of Philip Pettit’s neo-republican theory of freedom and its potential for extending justice to non-human animals}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}