Raffael Fasel's book is marvellous, a readable and immensely persuasive argument for a set of rights for some but not all animal species. Fasel embraces the unfashionable idea that the species category matters, and by defying received opinion in this way achieves a level of intellectual innovation that is at times almost thrilling. Along the way his prose is so clear, his preparation of his ground so meticulous, that the book manages at the same time to be an astute commentary on what it means to be that supposedly most pre-eminent of species of all, a human.

Conor Gearty, Professor of Human Rights Law, LSE Law School, UK

Fasel's book will become required reading for anyone interested in advancing the rights and well-being of non-human animals, as well as those interested in how to square such a goal with the still-urgent problem of how to better respect the dignity of all human beings. The argument presented is theoretically nuanced and deep, yet ultimately quite practical in its implications, with relevance to law, philosophy, and animal studies broadly.

Douglas Kysar, Joseph M. Field '55 Professor of Law, Yale Law School, US

This book is at the cutting edge.

Dr Richard Ryder, President of the RSPCA, UK

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The study is not only innovative but also a page turner. It rehabilitates a species membership based approach, and opens the way for examining more questions, notably: which species and which rights?

Professor Anne Peters, Director at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law Heidelberg, Germany

More Equal Than Others is one of the most fascinating and original contributions to scholarship on animal (and human) rights to have emerged in recent years. Fasel employs an impressive blend of legal scholarship, the history of political ideas, and practical ethics to make a case for a radically ambitious set of legal rights for animals that do not undermine the basic entitlements of human beings. I am sure that his 'Species Membership Approach' will provoke much important debate amongst scholars and activists in the years to come.

Alasdair Cochrane, Professor of Political Theory, University of Sheffield, UK

With his new book, More Equal Than Others: Humans and the Rights of Other Animals, Raffael Fasel enters the debates about animal rights with the rigor of a philosopher and the practicality of a lawyer. Fasel challenges a longtime skepticism by animal advocates that operating in terms of species ends up advancing speciesism with all its negative connotations. Readers with an interest in animal rights as a philosophical or practical matter will not want to miss More Equal Than Others.

Kristen Stilt, Professor, Harvard Law School, Faculty Director, Brooks McCormick Jr. Animal Law & Policy Program at Harvard, US

Overall, More Equal Than Others is a remarkable book. It manages to take a bird's-eye view to the animal rights debate. It has already shaped the way I think about these issues, and it will be required reading for people interested in a number of fields, including human, animal and even AI rights.

Visa Kurki, Jurisprudence

In a brilliant new book, More Equal Than Others, Raffael N. Fasel looks to this history and draws out two primary traditions of rights justification for scrutiny (...) But law and moral philosophy are not subject to the same gods. And this pragmatic book, which is a triumph of scholarship and an impressive salvo at the evolutionary vanguard of law, offers real hope: a new path to better legal protections for kin such as Hercules.

Simone Gubler, TLS

The freshness of his vision and novelty of his categorisations allow his ideal types to illuminate common features of what seem at first glance to be very different theories. By meritocratising aristocracy and adding a dash of realism and feasibility to a field too often dominated by impractical idealism and normative predetermination, Fasel manages to engage with theorists who sometimes seem to talk past rather than to one another (...) The journey is fascinating, the analysis acute, examples well chosen and thought-provoking, and arguments need to be addressed constructively by anyone seeking to contribute to this field.

David Feldman, Nordic Journal of Human Rights

Unprecedented demands have recently arrived at the doorstep of courts and parliaments the world over: nonhuman animals should receive some of the rights that have so far been reserved to human beings. This development has raised fundamental questions about the nature of legal rights, and who should have them. More Equal Than Others: Humans and the Rights of Other Animals provides a sustained analysis of the fundamental rights of human and nonhuman animals to explore the issue of whether conferring fundamental legal rights to animals would undermine the equal status and rights of humans. Raffael N Fasel proposes an unorthodox but practical solution to this issue: the Species Membership Approach (SMA). According to the SMA, legal rights and similar entitlements should be granted to animals based on the species to which they belong, not their individual capacities. By pioneering an approach that focuses on species membership rather than individual capacities, the author demonstrates how fundamental legal rights can be extended to nonhuman animals without threatening the status and equal rights of humans. This book examines the antithetical nature of the human rights and animal rights conceptions that have so far dominated the debate and demonstrates how a middle ground can be reached between these opposing conceptions. Informed by the forgotten history of animal and human rights in the French Enlightenment, More Equal Than Others radically reimagines the spectrum of fundamental rights conceptions.
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This book offers a sustained analysis of the fundamental rights of humans and nonhuman animals. It pioneers a new approach that focuses on species membership rather than individual capacities to challenge an orthodox view in scholarship on the rights of animals.
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Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: Animal and Human Rights in the Enlightenment Chapter 3: The Aristocratic Conception Chapter 4: The Meritocratic Conception Chapter 5: Sentientist Rights: A Third Conception? Chapter 6: Meritocratizing the Aristocracy Chapter 7: The Species Membership Approach Chapter 8: Conclusion
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Raffael N Fasel is the Yates Glazebrook Fellow and College Assistant Professor in Law at Jesus College, Cambridge and Affiliated Lecturer at the Cambridge Law Faculty. He was previously Fellow in Law at the London School of Economics, and obtained his PhD in Law from the University of Cambridge. He holds an LLM from Yale Law School, an MA in Philosophy from University College London, and a Bachelor and Master of Law from the University of Fribourg.
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Proposes an unorthodox but practical solution to overcome the tension between popular human and animal rights arguments Uncovers the shared roots of animal rights and human rights in the Enlightenment Argues that animals should be granted legal rights on the basis of their species, not their individual capacities
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Product details

ISBN
9780198907404
Published
2024
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Weight
448 gr
Height
240 mm
Width
160 mm
Thickness
15 mm
Age
P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
224

Biographical note

Raffael N Fasel is the Yates Glazebrook Fellow and College Assistant Professor in Law at Jesus College, Cambridge and Affiliated Lecturer at the Cambridge Law Faculty. He was previously Fellow in Law at the London School of Economics, and obtained his PhD in Law from the University of Cambridge. He holds an LLM from Yale Law School, an MA in Philosophy from University College London, and a Bachelor and Master of Law from the University of Fribourg.