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Unlikely Allies Against Factory Farms: Animal Rights Advocates and Environmentalists

 
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Short Description:
This journal article examines the risks and opportunities associated with social movement coalitions that come together to impede the rise of Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) in the United States.

Abstract:
I examine the risks and opportunities associated with social movement coalition building in attempts to block or curtail the rise of Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) in the United States. As producers have scaled up animal production facilities, environmentalists and animal rights activists, along with numerous other social actors, have begun anti-CAFO campaigns.
I argue that while the CAFO has mobilized a diverse group of social actors, these individuals and organizations do not all have the same interests (aside from resistance to CAFOs), leading to some unlikely allies. These odd alliances provide opportunities for agrifood scholars to study the relationship between the coalitions that social movement organizations form and the support they receive from their respective constituencies.
Lastly, I argue that the need for agrifood scholars to address the pitfalls associated with single-issue coalition building extends beyond the unlikely alliance between environmentalists and animal rights activists, as agrifood related crises have led to a proliferation of such coalitions.
[Abstract excerpted from website]

Spot Check Number: 1227
Sponsor: Michigan State University
Researcher/Author: David Holt
Animal Type: Farm Animals
Record Type: Academic Paper, Journal Article, Survey Summary
Research Method: Unknown or Not Applicable
Geographic Region: United States National
Population Descriptors: Environmental and animal rights activitists
Year Conducted: December 2007

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