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2003056100[edited by] Susan J. Armstrong, Richard G. Botzler.24 cm.Includes bibliographical references.
Association of Practical and Professional Ethics National Cases 2009 http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
Oxford University Press2nd ed.24 cm.Moral Issues about animals -- Humane housing for hogs -- Veal crates and human palates -- What is a chicken worth? -- Sport of rooster fighting -- Winky and Wanda at the Detroit Zoo -- Ringling Brothers' big cats -- Cosmetic surgery for dogs -- Animal sacrifice as religious ritual : the Santeria case -- Bonobos : humans' closest relatives face extinction -- Head injury experiments on primates at the University of Pennsylvania -- What does the public have a right to know? -- Can there be cruelty-free cosmetic testing? -- Monkeys without mothers -- Experimental study of animal aggression -- Death of a vagrant bird -- Should frog dissection continue?Includes bibliographical references and index.Other format available: Online version:; Human use of animals.; 2nd ed.; Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2008; Online version:; Human use of animals.; 2nd ed.; Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2008Tom L. Beauchamp ... [et al.]. More Records: Show record informationInternet resource (url)Book; Internet Resource
Case from the National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science, University of Buffalo. http://sciencecases.lib.buffalo.edu/cs/
© Association for Practical and Professional Ethics 2013
Case from the February 28, 2013 Intercollegiate Ethics Bowl
Case from the 2001 APPE National Ethics Bowl Championship. Copyright, Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2001. http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
Case from the 2004 APPE National Ethics Bowl Championship. Copyright, Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2004. http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
Case from the 2004 APPE National Ethics Bowl Championship. Copyright, Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2004. http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
Case from the 2002 APPE National Ethics Bowl Championship. Copyright, Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2002. http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
Case from the 2004 APPE National Ethics Bowl Championship. Copyright, Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2004. http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
Case Study from the 2002 National Ethics Bowl Competition. Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2002,
Case from the 2003 APPE National Ethics Bowl Championship. Copyright, Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2003. http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
Case from the 2004 APPE National Ethics Bowl Championship. Copyright, Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, 2004. http://www.indiana.edu/~appe/ethicsbowl.html
24 cm.Gorilla rangers -- The great ape declaration -- Rats, rabbits, and the EPA -- Tigers and tourists -- Yellowstone wolves -- Rehkjavik raiders -- High-seas fish wars -- matinicus Island -- Taking Lake Tahoe -- The Delhi Sands fly -- Mr. Cone's woodpeckers -- The God Squad -- The John Day Dam -- Not on Cape Cod -- Oil and ANWR -- The grand staircase -- The Maine Woods National park -- Old growth on Mount Wachusett -- Massachusetts question one -- Leopold and traps -- Monkey-wrenching -- Saving Mink, killing voles -- Have you seen this fish? -- Australian cats -- Hawaiian Feral pigs -- Tasmanian tigers -- Golden rice -- Ancient apples, dangerous work -- Mosquitoes, disease, and DDT -- A breath of fresh air -- The dark skies ordinance -- The answer is blowing in the wind -- The Tooele weapons incinerator -- The toxic lagoon -- Bhopal -- CERES and corporate responsibility -- DRUMET Poland -- a different approach -- Scientific integrity at EPA -- Peace with all of creation -- Plumbing matters -- Is the lifeboat full? -- Demography as destiny --Trading pollutants.Includes bibliographical references and indexes.Patrick G. Derr and Edward M. McNamara. More Records: Show record informationInternet resource (url)Book; Internet Resource
24 cm.Preface -- Correlation guide -- Introduction -- Unit 1: Environmental Philosophy -- Issue 1: Is the precautionary principle a sound approach to risk analysis? -- Yes: Rise of the precautionary principle: a social movement gathers strength / Nancy Myers -- No: Precautionary principle: is it a threat to toxicological science? / Bernard D Goldstein -- Issue 2: Is sustainable development compatible with human welfare? -- Yes: European dream: building sustainable development in a globally connected world / Jeremy Rifkin -- No: Wilting Greens / Ronald Bailey -- Issue 3: Should a price be put on the goods and services provided by the world's ecosystems? -- Yes: Economic value of ecological services provided by insects / John E Losey and Mace Vaughan -- No: Pricing biodiversity and ecosystem services: the never-ending story / Marino Gatto and Giulio A De Leo -- Unit 2: Principles Versus Politics -- Issue 4: Should the endangered species act be strengthened? -- Yes: Testimony before the oversight hearing on the endangered species act / John Kostyack -- No: Testimony before the oversight hearing on the endangered species act / Monita Fontaine -- Issue 5: Should the EPA be doing more to fight environmental injustice? -- Yes: Environmental justice programs, statement before the Subcommittee on Superfund and Environmental Health, Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works / Robert D Bullard -- No: Environmental justice programs, statement before the Subcommittee on Superfund and Environmental Health, Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works / Granta Y Nakayama -- Issue 6: Can pollution rights trading effectively control environmental problems? -- Yes: Carbon trading / James Allen and Anthony White -- No: Trading away the earth: pollution credits and the perils of 'free market environmentalism' / Brian Tokar -- Unit 3: Energy Issues -- Issue 7: Should the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge be opened to oil drilling? -- Yes: To drill or not to drill / Dwight R Lee -- No: Senate Energy Committee / Jeff Bingaman et al -- Issue 8: Is global warming skepticism just smoke and mirrors? -- Yes: Smoke, mirrors & hot air: how ExxonMobil uses big tobacco's tactics to manufacture uncertainty on climate science / Seth Schulman et al -- No: Liberal scientists lead Jihad against global-warming skeptics / Ivan Osorio, Iain Murray, and Myron Ebell -- Issue 9: Is wind power green? -- Yes: Whither wind? / Charles Komanoff -- No: Wayward wind?, speech given in the township of Perry, near Silver Lake, Wyoming County, New York / Jon Boone -- Issue 10: Should cars be more efficient? -- Yes: CAFE standards, testimony before Committee on Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation / David Friedman -- No: Why the government's CAFE standards for fuel efficiency should be repealed, not increased / Charli E Coon -- Issue 11: Do biofuels enhance energy security? -- Yes: Testimony before Committee on Senate Energy and Natural Resources / Bob Dinneen -- No: Biofuels-facts and fiction / Mark Anslow -- Issue 12: Is it time to revive nuclear power? -- Yes: Testimony before the United States Senate Committee on Energy & Natural Resources, Hearing on the Department of Energy's Nuclear Power 2010 Program / Michael J Wallace -- No: Brave nuclear world, part II / Karen Charman -- Unit 4: Food And Population -- Issue 13: Do falling birthrates pose a threat to human welfare? -- Yes: Birth dearth / Michael Meyer -- No: Fewer the better / David Nicholson-Lord -- Issue 14: Is genetic engineering the answer to hunger? -- Yes: Is genetic engineering the answer to hunger?" / Gerald D Coleman -- No: Genetic engineering is not the answer / Sean McDonagh -- Issue 15: Is a large-scale shift to organic farming the best way to increase world food supply? -- Yes: Can organic farming feed us all? / Brian Halweil -- No: Organic myth: a food movement makes a pest of itself / John J Miller -- Unit 5: Toxic Chemicals -- Issue 16: Should DDT be banned worldwide? -- Yes: Malaria, mosquitoes, and DDT / Anne Platt McGinn -- No: Statement before the US Senate Committee on Environment & Public Works, Hearing on the Role of Science in Environmental Policy-Making / Donald R Roberts -- Issue 17: Do environmental hormone mimics pose a potentially serious health threat? -- Yes: Hazards of environmental estrogens / Michele L Trankina -- No: Endocrine disrupters, politics, pesticides, the cost of food and health / Michael Gough -- Issue 18: Is the Superfund Program successfully protecting human health from hazardous materials? -- Yes: Superfund matures gracefully / Robert H Harris, Jay Vandeven, and Mike Tilchin -- No: Not in their backyard / Randall Patterson -- Issue 19: Should the United States reprocess spent nuclear fuel? -- Yes: Statement before the House Committee on Science, Energy Subcommittee, Hearing on Nuclear Fuel Reprocessing / Phillip J Finck -- No: Case against a near-term decision to reprocess spent nuclear fuel in the United States / Matthew Bunn -- Issue 20: Is carbon capture technology ready to limit carbon emissions? -- Yes: Carbon capture and sequestration, testimony before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality / David G Hawkins -- No: Carbon capture & storage: blue-sky technology or just blowing smoke? / Charles W Schmidt -- Issue 21: Should North America's landscape be restored to its pre-human state? -- Yes: Restoring America's big, wild animals / C Josh Donlan -- No: Pleistocene Park: does re-wilding North America represent sound conservation for the 21st century? / Dustin R Rubenstein, Daniel I Rubenstein, Paul W Sherman, and Thomas A Gavin -- Contributors.Includes bibliographical references.Clashing views on environmental issues; Environmental issuesselected, edited, and with introductions by Thomas Easton. 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