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  1. Interspecies Etiquette in Place: Ethical Affordances in Swim-With-Dolphins Programs.Traci Warkentin - 2011 - Ethics and the Environment 16 (1):99-122.
    The places where humans meet other animals matter. This is especially true when considering encounters with animals in captivity. Myriad factors come into play in these instances, not the least of which involve the physical structures of each place and the kinds of organized activities that are offered, encouraged or discouraged there. Motivated by a strong desire to get up close to a dolphin, many people seek out tourism activities offering opportunities to "swim with dolphins." But what is the nature (...)
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  • “What Have Animals to Do With Social Work?” A Sociological Reflection on Species and Social Work.Kay Peggs - 2017 - Journal of Animal Ethics 7 (1):96-108.
    The contributors to Thomas Ryan’s Animals in Social Work offer a challenge to anthropocentrism in social work theory and practice. Because this challenge resonates with the “zoological connection” that confronts anthropocentric sociology, this review article offers a sociological examination of key points raised. In focusing on conceptualizations of the human animal binary, personhood and selfhood, property, ethics, and welfare, this article concludes that nonhuman animals ought to matter to social work. Ryan is right: One day social workers will be incredulous (...)
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  • Beyond Human to Humane: A Multispecies Analysis of Care Work, Its Repression, and Its Potential.Kendra Coulter - 2016 - Studies in Social Justice 10 (2):199-219.
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