Planet Debate 2011 September/October l-d release Animal Rights


AT: “CLS Kritik of Rights” – General



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AT: “CLS Kritik of Rights” – General


CLS MAKES SIMPLISTIC GENERALIZATIONS WHILE IGNORING HISTORICAL RELEVANCE OF RIGHTS TO MARGINALIZED GROUPS

Helena Silverstein, Professor, Lafayette College of Government and law, 1996, Unleashing Rights: law, meaning and the animal rights movement, p. 85

There have been numerous responses to these critical assessments of rights. Some scholars have elaborated what has been called the “minority critique” of CLS. This critique suggests that the CLS indictment of rights is unrealistic, overlooks the context and experiences of discrimination, and ignores the importance of rights for marginal and oppressed groups. By neglecting the experiences and perspectives of oppressed groups, CLS underestimates the need for rights. In a related fashion, other analyses argue that CLS assessments of legal ideology are overly simplistic. Use of rights language is not all bad or all good but a complex mixture of both. Moreover, the indeterminate nature of rights language not only means that the powerful can impose their views but that opportunities exist for flexible interpretation of rights by the oppressed. Oppressed groups can therefore employ rights as a weapon against the dominant.
EXTENSION OF RIGHTS DISCOURSE TO ANIMALS CAUSES A RECONSIDERATION OF THE MEANING OF THE LANGUAGE

Helena Silverstein, Professor, Lafayette College of Government and law, 1996, Unleashing Rights: law, meaning and the animal rights movement, p. 77

This third point does not suggest that it is only when rights language is extended to animals that it moves beyond individualism. The point is that the recent expansion of rights to animals has fostered reconsideration of the meaning of rights. To a greater degree than past attempts to extend rights to blacks, women, workers, and other human minority groups, the extension to animals has encouraged scholars and activists—and potentially the broader community—to rethink our conceptions of rights. In the future, this reevaluation of the meaning of rights language may inspire useful reconsideration of human rights issues.

AT: “Feminist Kritik of Rights”


NO LINK – THE ARGUMENT THAT RIGHTS ARE PATRIARCHAL BECAUSE MEN DEVELOPED THEM NONSENSICAL

Tom Regan, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, North Carolina State University, 2001, Defending Animal Rights, p. 54

One possible defense of the feminist indictment appeals to the genealogy of the idea of individual rights. After all, it was men who first formulated this idea—the Locke’s and Rousseau’s of the world, not the Xanthippe’s and Hildegard’s. The genealogy defense (to give this line of reasoning a name) would have us infer than an idea is patriarchal if it was originated by men.

This is an implausible defense. If we were to accept it, we would be obliged to say that our current understanding of the circulation of blood is patriarchal because it was Harvey and his male contemporaries who were the first to discover how blood circulates. No less absurd consequences would follow in every other similar context (for example, Euclidean geometry must be patriarchal because Euclid was a man.) Surely, it is absurd to imagine that Euclid’s definition of a right triangle is a symptom of male domination of that it arbitrarily favors, or favors in any way whatsoever, the interests of men over those of women. Logically, the fact that a man discovers, creates, or simply says something does not entail that what is discovered, created, or said is tainted by male prejudice.
NO LINK – THE FACT THAT RIGHTS HAVE BEEN UTILIZED BY A PATRIARCHAL SYSTEM, DOES NOT MEAN THAT THEY INHERENTLY ENTRENCH OR PERPETUATE PATRIARCHY

Tom Regan, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, North Carolina State University, 2001, Defending Animal Rights, p. 54-5

A second possible defense of the feminist indictment, the implementation defense, takes a different route. Even a cursory view of social history, from classical Greek civilization up to the present, confirms that by claiming rights for themselves, men have routinely received advantages that have been routinely and systematically denied to women (Regan, 2000). No less clearly, men have overwhelmingly been the ones to decide who is to be the beneficiary of these advantages. Thus, because reliance on the idea of individual rights can be shown to have thee patriarchal results, should we not conclude that the very idea of individual rights is patriarchal?

It seems not. Ideas are not shown to be patriarchal simply because they have been used in a patriarchal fashion; if anything, the patriarchal use of ideas shows that those who use them are patriarchal, not that the ideas themselves are. To make this point clearer, consider an example from another quarter. Various people over time have used the idea of genetic inheritance as a basis for classifying the members of some race “superior” and others “inferior.” Does this show that the idea of genetic inheritance is a racist idea? Clearly not. What it shows is something very different—namely, that some people have used the idea of the genetic inheritance in a racist fashion.

The same is true of individual rights. One cannot logically infer that the idea of the rights of the individual is tainted with male bias because biased men have used it to forward their interests at the expense of women’s.

AT: “Feminist Kritik of Rights”



TURN – THE FEMINIST KRITIK OF RIGHTS IS PATRIARCHAL

Tom Regan, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, North Carolina State University, 2001, Defending Animal Rights, p. 57-8

In addition to facing legitimate concerns about its empirical underpinnings, the male mind defense also seems to confront a damaging paradox of its own making. Notwithstanding its purported attack on patriarchy, the male mind defense arguably bears symptoms of the very prejudice it seeks first to expose and then to supplant. Partisans of this defense not only denounce the valorization of those qualities that they claim have been traditionally associated with the masculine; they also celebrate those qualities (emotion, subjectivity, an ethic of care) traditionally associated with the feminine. Yet the implied claim to superiority on behalf of these feminine qualities appears highly paradoxical, first, because celebrating the “feminine’ set of qualities over the masculine is to engage in the very sort of dualistic, hierarchical thinking alleged to be characteristic of the male mind, and second, because the collective portrait of those qualities that are definitive of the female, like every other portrait in the patriarchy, will have been drawn not by women but by men. How paradoxical, then, that pursuant to their liberation from the crippling vestiges of patriarchy, some women should choose to define themselves in the very terms in which they have been defined by the patriarchal traditions they seek to overthrow.
TURN – THE SYSTEM OF VIEWING ANIMALS IN A HIERARCHICAL FASHION MIRRORS PATRIARCHY

David Nibert, Professor of sociology, Wittenburg University, 2002, Animal Rights/Human Rights: entanglement of oppression and liberation, p. 204

Thus in the age of “liberty, equality, and fraternity,” many oppressed groups were disparaged for their alleged “low mental caliber” and consequently scaled low in a hierarchy of worth. The measurements of an individuals or group’s value was based on the purported level of intelligence, measured or attribute in ethnocentric, anthropocentric ways. In addition, ecofeminists have observed that ideas about the hierarchy of worth are deeply intertwined with patriarchy, a system of social organization in which masculinity is valued over femininity (both being social constructions).. Ecofeminist Janis Birkeland put it this way:
”In the dominant Patriarchal cultures, reality is divided according to gender, and a higher value is placed on those attributes associated with masculinity, a construction that is called ‘hierarchical dualism.’ In these cultures, women have historically been seen as closer to the earth or nature….Also, women and nature have been juxtaposed against mind and spirit, which have been associated in Western cosmology with the ‘masculine’ and elevated to a higher plane of beingIt is clear that a complex morality based on dominance and exploitation has developed in conjunction with the devaluing of nature and “feminine” values.”
TURN - ANIMAL ACTIVISTS USE RIGHTS DISCOURSE TO EMPHASIZE COMMUNITY AND AN ETHIC OF CARE

Helena Silverstein, Professor, Lafayette College of Government and law, 1996, Unleashing Rights: law, meaning and the animal rights movement, p. 71

In short, rights language as deployed in movement literature and activities has been associated with the values of relationship, responsibility, caring and community. Constant reference to the label animal rights is combined with the facts of mistreatment, the proposition that animals are related to humans and part of the community of life, and the suggestion that we have a responsibility to act on behalf of animals. As a result, the deployment of animal rights within movement literature conveys values that contrast with the traditional individualistic underpinnings of rights.



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