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All Things Wild - Unlocking the Cage (with Kevin Schneider)

Unlocking the Cage (with Kevin Schneider)

04/25/21 • 65 min

All Things Wild

Kevin Schneider is the Executive Director of the Nonhuman Rights Project. The NhRP was featured in the documentary Unlocking the Cage and works to secure fundamental rights for nonhuman animals through litigation, legislation, and education. Specifically, the NhRP is involved in ongoing litigation to change the common law status of great apes, elephants, dolphins, and whales from mere “things” to “legal persons” that possess such fundamental rights as bodily liberty and bodily integrity. Kevin earned his law degree from Florida State University in 2013 with a specialization in environmental and land use law. He graduated with a B.A. in political science from the University of Massachusetts, Boston, in 2009. We discuss the differences between animal welfare laws and rights, the history of habeas corpus, the legal definition and application of personhood, the clients of the NhRP, and the common counter arguments of opponents to legal rights for nonhuman animals.

Links from episode

Nonhuman Rights Project

Nonhuman Rights Project Progress

Happy the Elephant

Elephant Mirror Test

Dolphin Mirror Test

Chimpanzee Memory Test

Unlocking the Cage

Sandra’s personhood status in Argentina

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Kevin Schneider is the Executive Director of the Nonhuman Rights Project. The NhRP was featured in the documentary Unlocking the Cage and works to secure fundamental rights for nonhuman animals through litigation, legislation, and education. Specifically, the NhRP is involved in ongoing litigation to change the common law status of great apes, elephants, dolphins, and whales from mere “things” to “legal persons” that possess such fundamental rights as bodily liberty and bodily integrity. Kevin earned his law degree from Florida State University in 2013 with a specialization in environmental and land use law. He graduated with a B.A. in political science from the University of Massachusetts, Boston, in 2009. We discuss the differences between animal welfare laws and rights, the history of habeas corpus, the legal definition and application of personhood, the clients of the NhRP, and the common counter arguments of opponents to legal rights for nonhuman animals.

Links from episode

Nonhuman Rights Project

Nonhuman Rights Project Progress

Happy the Elephant

Elephant Mirror Test

Dolphin Mirror Test

Chimpanzee Memory Test

Unlocking the Cage

Sandra’s personhood status in Argentina

Previous Episode

undefined - The Dolphins and Whales of New York City (with Kristi Collom)

The Dolphins and Whales of New York City (with Kristi Collom)

Kristi Ashley Collom is a Senior Research Associate and Dolphin Catalog Manager for Gotham Whale and an acoustic analyst for Wildlife Conservation Society’s New York passive acoustic monitoring research. Prior to these positions, Kristi completed her graduate degree in Animal Behavior and Conservation with Dr. Diana Reiss at Hunter College. Kristi grew up in New York City, and began her wildlife career as a polar zookeeper at the Central Park Zoo, where she worked with seals, sea lions and penguins. Kristi traveled to Belize with Oceanic Society to study bottlenose dolphins, and ultimately ended up back in New York City working in marine conservation. In today’s conversation we discuss what is known about the dolphins and whales that are seen in New York City waters, with an emphasis on the bottlenose dolphin and humpback whale populations. We discuss the history of these animals in New York, what is known about their social lives and migration patterns, and many of the questions that continue to be a mystery in the lives of these animals.

Gotham Whale

Kristi Collom

Common Dolphins in the East River

The America Princess

Artificial Reefs

Next Episode

undefined - Africa's Wild Elephants (with Dr. Phyllis Lee)

Africa's Wild Elephants (with Dr. Phyllis Lee)

Professor Phyllis Lee is the director of science for the Amboseli Elephant Research Project, which was started in 1972 by Cynthia Moss and is the longest running study of wild elephants anywhere in the world. Phyllis has been carrying out field research on animal behavior since 1975 and has been studying the elephants of Amboseli since1982. She has collaborated with a number of researchers working on forest and Asian elephants as well as primates from around the world and she is the author of over 80 journal publications. In this episode we speak about what has been learned through this long-term study of individual wild elephants and what is still unknown. We speak extensively about the wide range of behaviors elephants engage in that highlights the unique personalities of each individual animal. We also speak about the different modalities of elephant communication, the dynamics of elephant social structure, the phenomena of “Musth” in bull elephants, and the challenges mother elephants face raising their young in the wilderness of Kenya.

Links for Episode

Amboseli Elephant Trust

Professor Phyllis Lee

Collaring Wild Elephants

Wildlife Warriors Episode (Amboseli Elephants)

Rescuing Baby Elephant Stuck in Mud

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