The Japanese Crested Ibis Flies Back from Extinction
Recently, Britannica Japan Company, Encyclopaedia Britannica’s subsidiary in Japan, informed Advocacy for Animals that ten crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) raised in captivity had been released into the wild at Sado Island. The release on Sept. 25, 2008, they said, was exciting and emotional for the Japanese because the highly endangered bird—called toki in Japan—has symbolic associations with the country itself. […]
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The South Korean Animal Welfare Movement Takes Root
The development of South Korea in the late 20th century is often said to have been an “economic miracle.” Devastated by the Korean War (1950-53)—whose continuing legacy is a peninsula still divided into two countries—the Republic of Korea faced a long uphill battle to reach its current status as a player on the world stage. After years of political upheaval and great sacrifices on the part of its people, South Korea succeeded in transforming itself into a highly urbanized, sophisticated, and technologically forward nation.
Like many Asian countries, Korea has not traditionally had quite the same concept of animal welfare as now prevails in the West […]
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Turtles: Moving Quickly Toward Extinction
This week Advocacy for Animals follows up our recent article on diminishing frog populations with a report on turtles and tortoises, another group of animals facing global threats on many fronts. Contributor Gregory McNamee writes from his home in the southwestern United States, where turtle sightings are becoming rarer, as they are elsewhere in the country and around the world.
A few weeks ago, a tornado blew through my Sonoran Desert home, felling trees and knocking down a neighbor’s wall. The next morning, I went out to inspect the damage, and in the swirl of fallen limbs and scattered roof tiles I happened on an uncustomary sight: a young, dirt-encrusted Xerobates agassizii, a desert tortoise, poked its head out from behind a creosote bush, looked myopically in my general direction, and lumbered off into the rocks. […]
The Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act
This week Advocacy for Animals is pleased to present an article by Odette Wilkins, who is Executive Director of the Equal Justice Alliance, a coalition of animal-protection and social-justice organizations dedicated to opposing the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act of 2006.
The Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (AETA), which was passed by the U.S. Congress and signed into law by George W. Bush in November 2006, potentially targets for prosecution American citizens who would advocate for animal protection. The declared purpose of the act is to give the Justice Department the tools to “apprehend, prosecute, and convict individuals committing animal enterprise terrorism.” However, even a cursory examination of the AETA reveals a very different picture: it appears to serve the greater business interests of animal enterprises and treats dissent, once an American citizen’s cherished First Amendment right, as terrorism. Despite significant opposition from animal-protection, civil-liberties, and environmental activists and organizations, the law received virtually no media coverage during its passage (the AETA was identified as one of the 25 most under-reported stories of 2006 by Project Censored). […]
2008 – The Year of the Frog
According to the Chinese calendar, the year 2008 is known as the Year of the Rat. To those concerned with the recent population declines of frogs, 2008 has been dubbed the Year of the Frog. The Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) in North America, in partnership with several other environmental organizations (such as Amphibian Ark and Conservation International), has designated 2008 the Year of the Frog to highlight these interesting animals and the threats they face. […]
Helping Sanctuaries Help Animals: The Global Federation of Animal Sanctuaries
This week, Advocacy for Animals presents an article on a new international organization dedicated to the establishment of objective standards for animal sanctuaries and to the accreditation of those sanctuaries. That organization is the Global Federation of Animal Sanctuaries (GFAS). The article was written by Patty Finch, GFAS Executive Director.
What if six months ago you made a contribution to an organization that claimed to be an animal sanctuary, and only now discovered the truth about the facility? Perhaps some of its animals are sold to a ranch that allows canned hunts, meaning the animals are shot by “hunters” for “sport”, with no way to escape. Or perhaps the exotic animal facility you supported for its educational efforts turned out to imprison tigers in small enclosures or breed them in a basement. One mission of the Global Federation of Animal Sanctuaries is to ensure that donors are not deceived in this egregious manner and to support and shine a spotlight on legitimate and outstanding sanctuaries worldwide. These sanctuaries do the difficult and dedicated work of providing animals with the highest standards of humane care, free of any form of further exploitation. […]
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Elephants Find Paradise in Tennessee

“In recognition of the commitment, perseverance, and milestones achieved by The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee, the State of Tennessee, Lewis County and the City of Hohenwald have declared October 2008 as Elephant Awareness Month.” Advocacy for Animals salutes the work of this exceptional institution.
Hohenwald, Tennessee, south of Nashville, lies in an area of forests, lakes, and rolling fields. Located in this rural paradise is the 2,700-acre Elephant Sanctuary, established in 1995 to provide protected, natural-habitat refuges where “old, sick, and needy elephants can once again walk the earth in peace and dignity.” The Sanctuary’s secondary mission is spreading the word about “the crisis facing these social, sensitive, passionately intense, playful, complex, exceedingly intelligent and endangered creatures.”
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Special Election Issue: The Candidates on the Environment and Animal Welfare
This week Advocacy for Animals takes a look at the views of the U.S. presidential and vice-presidential candidates on issues related to the environment and animal welfare. Following is a summary of the voting records, official acts, and public statements of Senator John McCain (R), Senator Barack Obama (D), Governor Sarah Palin (R), and Senator Joe Biden (D) on drilling, mining, and energy conservation and development; animal welfare, including the protection of endangered or threatened species; global warming; and environmental conservation. […]
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