scholarly journals Živobran

Pannoniana ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 1-22
Author(s):  
Lidija Bakota

Abstract The paper will present the journal/magazine of the Croatian Association for the Protection of Animals Živobran (1894–1904) and explore its contribution to the development of social awareness on natural, cultural and ethical values of animal species with special reference to their educational role in the promotion of animal rights among the Croatian school population at the turn of the 20th century. Namely, by carrying out the cooperation with school institutions, the magazine of the Croatian Association for the Protection of Animals directly affected the formation of students’ thinking, standpoints and relations toward the animal world. The research corpus encompasses texts published in the journal/magazine of the Croatian Association for the Protection of Animals Živobran in the period from 1894 to 1904. The paper is a contribution to the research of Croatian cultural zoology and literary ecology.

2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 426-444 ◽  
Author(s):  
Piers Beirne

Scholars of human–animal studies, literary criticism and art history have paid considerable attention of late to how the visual representation of nonhuman animals has often and sometimes to great effect been used in the imagining of national identity. It is from the scrutinies of these several disciplines that the broad backcloth of this article is woven. Its focus is the neglected coupling of patriotism and carnism, instantiated here by its deployment in William Hogarth’s painting Calais Gate (1749). A pro-animal reading is offered of the English artist’s exhortation that it is in the nature of ‘true-born Britons’ to consume a daily dish of roast beef served with lashings of francophobia and anti-popery. The article suggests that alert contemporary viewers of Calais Gate would nevertheless have noticed that Hogarth’s painterly triumphalism ironically rekindles the repressed memory of English military defeat and territorial loss. Because the political and religious borders between England and France were so easily defaced and refaced, the accompanying air of uncertainty over national identity would also have infiltrated the perceived authenticity of English roast beef. The article draws on animal rights theory, on nonspeciesist green criminology and on green visual criminology in order to oppose the historical dominance of human interests over those of other animal species in discourses of abuse, cruelty and harm.


2008 ◽  
Vol 276 (1657) ◽  
pp. 605-613 ◽  
Author(s):  
John M McNamara ◽  
Philip A Stephens ◽  
Sasha R.X Dall ◽  
Alasdair I Houston

Interest in the evolution and maintenance of personality is burgeoning. Individuals of diverse animal species differ in their aggressiveness, fearfulness, sociability and activity. Strong trade-offs, mutation–selection balance, spatio-temporal fluctuations in selection, frequency dependence and good-genes mate choice are invoked to explain heritable personality variation, yet for continuous behavioural traits, it remains unclear which selective force is likely to maintain distinct polymorphisms. Using a model of trust and cooperation, we show how allowing individuals to monitor each other's cooperative tendencies, at a cost, can select for heritable polymorphisms in trustworthiness. This variation, in turn, favours costly ‘social awareness’ in some individuals. Feedback of this sort can explain the individual differences in trust and trustworthiness so often documented by economists in experimental public goods games across a range of cultures. Our work adds to growing evidence that evolutionary game theorists can no longer afford to ignore the importance of real world inter-individual variation in their models.


2012 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 247-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monica Flegel

There is a central contradiction in human relationships with animals: as Erica Fudge notes, “We live with animals, we recognize them, we even name some of them, but at the same time we use them as if they were inanimate, as if they were objects” (8). Such a contradiction is also, of course, present in human interactions, in which power relations allow for the objectification of one human being by another. In an analysis of images and texts produced by the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) in the nineteenth-century, I want to examine the overlap in representations of animals and humans as subject to objectification and control. One common way of critiquing human treatment of animals within the RSPCA's journals, Animal World and Band of Mercy, was to have humans trade places with animals: having boys fantastically shrunk to the size of the animals they tortured, for example, or imagining the horrors of vivisection when experienced by humans. Such imaginative exercises were meant to defamiliarize animal usage by implying a shared experience of suffering: what was wrong for a human was clearly just as wrong for an animal. However, I argue that some of the images employed by the society suggest the opposite; instead of constructing animal cruelty in a new light, these images instead work to underline the shared proximity of particular humans with animals. In texts that focus specifically upon humans wearing animal bonds – reins, collars, and muzzles – the RSPCA's anti-cruelty discourse both critiqued the tools of bondage and, I suggest, invited the audience to see deep connections between animals and the humans taking their place. Such connections ultimately weaken the force of the animal/human reversal as an animal rights strategy, suggesting as they do that humans themselves often have use value in economies of labor, affect, and are subject to the same power relations that produce an animal as “animal.”


1967 ◽  
Vol 113 (500) ◽  
pp. 701-709 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dugald Baird

All animal species have a high potential rate of increase, which must imply a high potential rate of death. Professor Holliday (1) has said: “Something must die, either the sperm, or the egg, or the embyro, or the infant or the adult … Most animals maintain a population at a fairly constant level—there are fluctuations of numbers, but they are fluctuations round a mean. There is a strong element of stability in nature. How is the population fixed at this relatively stable level? Two schools of thought exist. One says that the rules of Malthus apply strictly to the animal world—starvation, disease and predators are the stabilizers and do an immediate and effective job. The other, developed by Professor Wynne-Edwards in Aberdeen, says that animals limit their numbers before starvation does it for them. It is part of the animal's social organization and it is based on instinctive patterns of behaviour. Only a proportion of the population is allowed to breed and those who lose this right in competition become outcasts.”


2015 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 274-284
Author(s):  
Suhaimi Ab Rahman

Guarantees are considered to be the most common form of credit security used for lending transactions in modern banking. In Islam, guarantees are not peculiar since this practice has been known since the time of Prophet Muḥammad (saw). However, to date, no literature has discussed this concept or its historical development in detail. This article is an attempt to fill this gap through a discussion on this issue with special reference to the practice of the Prophet, his Companions and Followers. Reference has also been made to the Holy Qur’ān and prophetic Sunnah, as well as to books on tafsīr (exegesis), classical manuals, journal articles and legal historical bibliographies. This article concludes that financial guarantees were recognized as important in the development of the nation and that they were based upon good ethical values as well as the principle of taʿāwun (cooperation).


2021 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 406
Author(s):  
Mohammad Taufik ◽  
Bambang Irawan ◽  
Etika Khairina ◽  
Mochammad Iqbal Fadhlurrohman ◽  
Paisal Akbar

The most significant aspect of a leader’s behavior is ethics because it is a guideline for interacting, acting, and involving in government in an ethical manner without abusing power. This article aims to find out how the ethics of regional heads are applied in the administration of regional government. The research method used was qualitative with a literature study approach. Data collection was done by literature study by collecting various materials from books, journals, research results, and mass media (news). The results of research conducted on three districts/cities in Indonesia involving three leaders of the Mayor of Surabaya, the Mayor of Bandung, and the Regent of Purwakarta in 2015 show some real examples of regional heads who apply ethical values in their leadership, which can be seen from their performance and competence as well as ideas (innovation) and relationships with the community. It has gone well by applying ethical principles in its performance such as accountability, transparency, legal assurance, and justice. Competence in leadership includes the application of ethical values including emotional intelligence, self-management, social awareness, and relationship management. This study concludes that government ethics greatly influence the implementation and desired results, as well as on leadership, which will affect the performance carried out.


Molecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (20) ◽  
pp. 4680
Author(s):  
Zahra Mohammed Hassan ◽  
Tlou Grace Manyelo ◽  
Letlhogonolo Selaledi ◽  
Monnye Mabelebele

Over recent years, the monogastric animal industry has witnessed an increase in feed prices due to several factors, and this trend is likely to continue. The hike in feed prices is mostly due to extreme competition over commonly used conventional ingredients. For this trend to be subdued, alternative ingredients of both plant and animal origin need to be sourced. These types of ingredients are investigated with the aim of substituting all or some of the conventional compounds. However, alternative ingredients often have a double-edged sword effect, in that they can supply animals with the necessary nutrients although they contain antinutritional factors such as tannins. Tannins are complex secondary metabolites commonly present in the plant kingdom, known to bind with protein and make it unavailable; however, recently they have been proven to have the potential to replace conventional ingredients, in addition to their health benefits, particularly the control of zoonotic pathogens such as Salmonella. Thus, the purpose of this review is to (1) classify the types of tannins present in alternative feed ingredients, and (2) outline the effects and benefits of tannins in monogastric animals. Several processing methods have been reported to reduce tannins in diets for monogastric animals; furthermore, these need to be cost-effective. It can thus be concluded that the level of inclusion of tannins in diets will depend on the type of ingredient and the animal species.


ICR Journal ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 337-352
Author(s):  
Abdul Karim Abdullah

This paper argues that literature - story telling in particular - can be an effective way of teaching ethics. Exposing readers to good role models can help impart ethical values. The Qur’an itself uses story-telling to convey many of its ethical principles. Literature can serve as a powerful instrument in the cause of civilisational renewal, not only by promoting a culture of learning and literacy, but also by contributing to the development and strengthening of moral integrity.


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