Journal for Critical Animal Studies Editorial Executive Board



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Notes
1 Jo-Anne McArthur. We Animals, p. 9.
2 Jo-Anne McArthur. We Animals, p. 106.
3 Bradley D. Rowe. Food, habit, and the consumption of animals as educational encounter, p.

217.
4 Kathie Jenni. The Power of the Visual.


5 Steve Baker. Picturing the Beast: Animals, Identity and Representation.
6 Ibid.
7 Jo-Anne McArthur, We Animals, p. 48.
8 Ibid, p. 10.
9 Ariel Tsovel, What Can a Farm Animal Biography Accomplish? The Case of Portrait of a

Burger as a Young Calf, p. 247.
10 Jo-Anne McArthur. We Animals, p. 119.
11 Ibid, p. 14.
12 Timothy Pachirat. Every Twelve Seconds: Industrialized Slaughter and the Politics of Sight.
13 As O’Sullivan explains, although animal invisibility is increasing, some animals remain more

visible than others. Siobhan O’Sullivan, Animals, Equality and Democracy.


14 Jo-Anne McArthur. We Animals, p. 134.
15 Ralph R. Acampora. Extinction by Exhibition: Looking at and in the Zoo, p. 1.
16 Jo-Anne McArthur. We Animals, p. 51.
17 Elisa Aaltola. Animal Suffering: Representations and the Act of Looking, p. 27.
References
Aaltola, E. (2014). Animal Suffering: Representations and the Act of Looking. Anthrozoos: A Multidisciplinary Journal of the Interactions of People & Animals, 27(1), 19-31.

Acampora, R. R. (1998). Extinction by Exhibition: Looking at and in the Zoo. Human Ecology Review, 5(1), 1-4.

Baker, S. (2001). Picturing the Beast: Animals, Identity and Representation. Champaign: University of Illinois Press.

Jenni, K. (2005). The Power of the Visual. Animal Liberation Philosophy and Policy Journal, 3(1), 1-21.

O’Sullivan, S. (2011). Animals, Equality and Democracy. Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan.

Pachirat, T. (2011). Every Twelve Seconds: Industrialized Slaughter and the Politics of Sight. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Rowe, B. D. (2012). Food, Habit, and the Consumption of Animals as Educational Encounter. Philosophy of Education, pp. 210-218.

Tsovel, A. (2005). What Can a Farm Animal Biography Accomplish? The Case of Portrait of a Burger as a Young Calf. Society & Animals, 13(3), 245-262.





JCAS: Submission Guidelines
Editorial Objectives

The Journal for Critical Animal Studies is open to all scholars and activists. The journal was established for the purpose of fostering academic study of critical animal issues in contemporary society. While animal studies is increasingly becoming a field of importance in the academy, much work being done under this moniker takes a reformist or depoliticized approach that fails to mount a more serious critique of underlying issues of political economy and speciesist philosophy. JCAS is an interdisciplinary journal with an emphasis on animal liberation philosophy and policy issues. The journal was designed to build up the common activist’s knowledge of animal liberation while at the same time appealing to academic specialists. We encourage and actively pursue a diversity of viewpoints of contributors from the frontlines of activism to academics. We have created the journal for the purpose of facilitating communication between the many diverse perspectives of the animal liberation movement. Thus, we especially encourage submissions that seek to create new syntheses between differing disputing parties and to explore paradigms not currently examined.


Suggested Topics

Papers are welcomed on any area of animal liberation philosophy from any discipline, and presenters are encouraged to share theses or dissertation chapters. Because a major goal of the Institute for Critical Animal Studies is to foster philosophical, critical, and analytic thinking about animal liberation, papers that contribute to this project will be given priority (especially papers that address critical theory, political philosophy, social movement analysis, tactical analysis, feminism, activism and academia, Continental philosophy, or post-colonial perspectives). We especially encourage contributions that engage animal liberation in disciplines and debates that have received little previous attention.



Review Process

Each paper submitted is initially reviewed for general suitability for publication; suitable submissions will be read by at least two members of the journal’s editorial board.


Manuscript Requirements

The manuscript should be in MS Word format and follow MLA guidelines. All submissions should be double-spaced and in 12 point Times New Roman. Good quality electronic copies of all figures and tables should also be provided. All manuscripts should conform to American English spelling.

As a guide, we ask that regular essays and reviews be between 2000-8000 words and have limited endnotes. In exceptional circumstances, JCAS will consider publishing extended essays. Authors should supply a brief abstract of the paper (of no more than 250 words). A brief autobiographical note should be supplied which includes full names, affiliation, e-mail address, and full contact details.
Copyright

Articles submitted to JCAS should be original contributions and should not be under consideration for any other publication at the same time. For ease of dissemination and to ensure proper policing use, papers and contributions become the legal copyright of the publisher unless otherwise agreed.



**Norm Phelps is an American animal rights activist and writer. He is a founding member of the Society for Ethical and Religious Vegetarians and the author of several books on animal rights and religion, including Changing the Game: Why the Battle for Animal Rights is so Hard, and How We Can Win It (2013), The Longest Struggle: Animal Advocacy from Pythagoras to PETA (2007), The Great Compassion: Buddhism and Animal Rights (2004), and The Dominion of Love: Animal Rights According to the Bible (2002).

** Sean Kelly is an Associate Professor of Philosophy and Literature and Director of the Honors Program at Florida Gulf Coast University. His current work explores how certain conceptual blindnesses encourage humans to overlook human and nonhuman animal interaction to their own detriment. His work is sponsored by Humane Society University. Sean can be reached at 155 Reed Hall; Florida Gulf Coast University; Fort Myers, FL 33965; (239) 590-7440; skelly@fgcu.edu

Sean Meighoo received his Ph.D. in Social and Political Thought at York University (Toronto). He is currently an Assistant Professor in the Graduate Institute of Liberal Arts (ILA) at Emory University (Atlanta). His research and teaching interests include: twentieth-century continental philosophy and literary theory; race and postcolonial studies; feminism and queer studies; and posthumanism and animal studies.

** Sundhya Walther is a Ph.D. candidate in English and South Asian Studies at the University of Toronto. Her research challenges the dominant humanism of postcolonial discourse by exploring representations of interspecies contact in contemporary Indian fiction.

1 Adewale Owoseni holds a Master of Arts degree in Philosophy from the University of Ibadan. He is a doctoral student in Animal Ethics at the same institution. Other of his research interests are Philosophy of Culture, Existentialism and Epistemology. His first degree thesis titled “A Philosophical Examination of the Western Conception of Animal Rights” asserts the possibility of a non-western understanding of Animal Ethics. He is an active member of a budding animal welfare group within the University and he is currently working on a paper titled “Ethics and Practice towards Animals in Ibadan, South Western Nigeria.”

** Isaac Olufemi Olatoye holds a DVM and a Ph.D. in Veterinary Public Health and Preventive Medicine from the University of Ibadan, Nigeria. His research interests are Food Safety, Drug Residue and Animal Disease Surveillance Interventions. He is engaged in the training of DVM students in the areas of Animal Welfare, Veterinary Ethics and Jurisprudence as well as clinical and extension veterinary services. Olatoye is also an adjunct faculty member of the Paul Allen School for Global Animal Health, Washington State University, USA. He is currently co-authoring a paper titled “Ethics and Practice towards Animals in Ibadan, South Western Nigeria.” He is at the frontier of advocating for effective Animal Welfare practice in Nigeria.

Steve Kaufman received his M.D. from the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio. He can be reached at srk8@case.edu.

Kathryn Asher is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Sociology at the University of New Brunswick. Studying at the intersection of social movement studies, the sociology of diet, and social media studies, her focus is on measuring the effectiveness of online vegan and vegetarian video outreach campaigns in the U.S. Kathryn is also a researcher with the Humane Research Council and can be reached at Kathrynasher@me.com.


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