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Davies G, 2012, "Caring for the multiple and the multitude: assembling animal welfare and enabling ethical critique" Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 30(4) 623 – 638
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Caring for the multiple and the multitude: assembling animal welfare and enabling ethical critique
Gail Davies
Abstract. This paper constitutes a speculative bioethical intervention into the challenge of
developing cultures of care and assembling enriched environments for genetically altered
mice in laboratory environments. The principles of the 3Rs—to reduce, replace, and refine
the use of laboratory animals—established in the late 1950s, are still the institutional and
international starting point for humane animal experimentation. However, the proliferating
diversity and numbers of genetically altered animals used in biomedical research are a
challenge to the application of these universal principles. The different capacities of the many
mice brought into being through scientific practices constitute biomedical experimentation
as a multiple, challenging the identification of universal refinements. In this paper I argue that
these capacities constitute a multitude: their indefinite number and irreducible multiplicity
are both a threat to these principles and an opening to the possibility of new bioethical
formulations. Drawing on ethnographic research with scientists and policy makers involved
in animal welfare and biomedical research, this paper explores emerging strategies for
reassembling animal welfare in the face of the multitude and the multiple. By using insights
from Žižek, Haraway, and Hinchliffe, it aims to demonstrate the value of a speculative
ethics, which, instead of seeking new universal principles to protect animals from harm,
starts from the inevitable and particular entanglements of animal and human suffering, as a
way of connecting affective capacities across space and time. This is illustrated through the
experimental conjunctures of barbering mice. In conclusion, I suggest that such speculative
bioethical formulations may contribute to renarrating modes of ethical engagement when
sociotechnical assemblages are complex, objects and ontological forms are multiple and
mutable, data are simultaneously abundant and inadequate, and formal ethical review
procedures are incapable of either containing controversy or enabling critique.
Keywords: animal welfare, animal research, 3Rs, biotechnology, care, ethics, excess, multiplicity, multitude, speculative critique
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