Animal Aid

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Animal Aid logo
Animal Aid logo

Animal Aid, founded in 1977, is a British animal rights organisation. The group campaigns peacefully against all forms of animal abuse and promotes a cruelty-free lifestyle. It also investigates and exposes animal cruelty.

Animal Aid produces campaign reports, leaflets and factfiles, as well as educational and undercover videos. They also offer a quarterly magazine, a regular campaigners' bulletin, and a sales catalogue with cruelty-free products.

Contents

Animal rights

Activists
Greg Avery · David Barbarash
Rod Coronado · Barry Horne
Ronnie Lee · Keith Mann
Ingrid Newkirk · Andrew Tyler
Jerry Vlasak · Robin Webb

Groups/campaigns
Animal Aid
Animal Liberation Front
Animal liberation movement
Animal Rights Militia
BUAV · Great Ape Project
Justice Department
PETA
PCRM · SPEAK
Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty
Viva!

Issues
Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act
Animal rights
Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986
Animal testing · Bile bear
Factory farming
International trade in primates
Nafovanny
Non-human primate experiments
Operation Backfire
Speciesism

Cases
Britches
Cambridge University primates
Covance · Huntingdon Life Sciences
Pit of despair · Silver Spring monkeys
Unnecessary Fuss

Writers/advocates
Steven Best · Stephen R.L. Clark
Gary Francione · Gill Langley
Tom Regan · Richard D. Ryder
Peter Singer · Steven M. Wise

Categories
Animal experimentation
Animal Liberation Front
Animal rights movement

Animal rights
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Animal Aid was founded in January 1977 to work, by all peaceful means, for an end to animal cruelty. The organization is a not-for-profit limited company run by a volunteer council of management. It is denied charitable status because part of its work involves campaigning for changes in the law concerning animal protection. Its aims are:

  • To increase public awareness of the abuse of animals in our society, particularly in vivisection laboratories and factory farms and to educate public opinion to demand, by all lawful means, the abolition of all experiments on animals, factory farming and all other forms of animal abuse.
  • To examine existing legislation on matters associated with the above objectives or related aspects and to promote social, legal and administrative reforms in furtherance of the above objectives.
  • To prevent exploitation of animals.
  • To educate the public and particularly young people to a sense of moral responsibility towards animals.
  • To promote, generally, a lifestyle which does not involve the abuse of animals.
  • To collect, and diffuse among members and the public generally, information on all matters affecting the above objectives and with a view there to print, issue and circulate papers, periodicals, books, circulars and other literary matter and produce film and audio-visual material, and to promote, sponsor, procure or assist in any way, courses or lectures or other instructions in furtherance of such objectives. [1]

Animal Aid has a wide range of celebrity supporters, including Thom Yorke, Jilly Cooper, Simon Cowell, Annette Crosbie, Alan Davies, Stella McCartney, Richard Wilson, Wendy Turner Webster and Massive Attack.

Dr Charlotte Uhlenbroek, the primatologist, has supported the Animal Aid campaign against primate experiments , stating: "I have yet to hear a sufficiently compelling scientific argument that justifies the suffering inflicted on primates in medical research." [1]

Since 1997, Animal Aid has produced an annual "Mad Science Awards" ceremony, where it highlights "pointless and grotesque scientific research", awarding the "winners" a statue of a beagle being stabbed with a scalpel. The pro-animal research group Seriously Ill for Medical Research describes Animal Aid as "renowned by the scientific community for its lack of relevant knowledge, information, experience or expertise," and labels the Mad Science Awards "[an] ill-informed critique of medical research".[citation needed]

  1. ^ Cambridge Primate Labs AnimalAid.org.uk

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