Standing in Livestock's 'Long Shadow': The Ethics of Eating Meat on a Small Planet

Ethics and the Environment 16 (2):63-93 (2011)
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Abstract

A primary contribution of this essay is to provide a survey of the human and environmental impacts of livestock production. We will find that the mass consumption of animals is a primary reason why humans are hungry, fat, or sick and is a leading cause behind the depletion and pollution of waterways, the degradation and deforestation of the land, the extinction of species, and the warming of the planet. Recognizing these harms, this essay will consider various solutions being proposed to “shrink” livestock’s long shadow, including proposed “technical” or “market” solutions, a transition to “new agrarian” methods, and a vegetarian or vegan diet. Though important and morally relevant qualitative differences exist between industrial and non-industrial methods, this essay will conclude that, given the present and projected size of the human population, the morality and sustainability of one’s diet are inversely related to the proportion of animals and animal products one consumes.

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Brian G. Henning
Gonzaga University

References found in this work

The Quality of Life: What Quality? Whose Life?Crispin Tickell - 1992 - Environmental Values 1 (1):65-76.

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