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Full Description
Animal welfare science has expanded substantially over the last few decades. Historically a fringe concern, the welfare of the animals in our care is now a key consideration for owners, agricultural industry workers and consumers alike. Sharing lessons learned from animal welfare and human psychological research for better results across the species divide isn't necessarily a new idea. But over the last twenty-five years, how have attitudes to welfare and mental disorders changed in human medicine and psychiatry, and in studies of farmed, companion, laboratory and wild animals? How have research methodologies developed? Essentially, where have we got to now? In this book, the world's first professor of animal welfare, Don Broom, reflects on shared insights of how all species can better cope with challenges, from stress to pain.
Contents
1: One biology, one welfare, one health 2: The meaning of welfare and related terms 3: Understanding coping 4: Considering and measuring positive welfare 5: Needs, preferences, judgement bias, freedoms, domains 6: Welfare and a sustainable future 7: Predictions in 2001 and developments since then 8: Laws 9: The use of words in relation to welfare, neurobiology and psychiatry 10: Progress in psychiatry, psychotherapy and welfare



