Animals (Dec 2023)

Animal Ghosts at Canadian Universities: The Politics of Concealment and Transparency

  • Laura Janara,
  • Sue Donaldson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13243760
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 24
p. 3760

Abstract

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For many years, the lives of animals used for research in Canadian universities have been hidden from public view due both to physical concealment (e.g., security procedures and impenetrable labs) and administrative concealment (non-disclosure of information). Their lives unfold out of sight both physically and discursively, unavailable to the Canadian public for ethical consideration and democratic oversight. Recently, in response to calls by the public to end this secrecy, Canadian universities and the Canadian Council on Animal Care have embraced the language of “transparency” and have begun releasing documentation about animal research practices and procedures. This paper argues that this new “transparency” acts as its own kind of concealment practice, obscuring and displacing meaningful information while constructing highly selective ways of seeing animals in science, and manufacturing acquiescence/consent on the part of the public.

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