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Society and Animals Forum

Newsletter / February 1996

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1. DISCRIMINATION AGAINST PSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS FOR THEIR RIGHTS VIEWS

In their important analysis, Gluck and Kubacki (1991, Ethics and Behavior) describe how one response to the current debate over the use of animals in research is the adoption by biomedical and psychology researchers of a "strategic defensive posture." These researchers talk as if they were in a "state of siege. "Regrettably, the following accounts of the recent experiences of two psychology students illustrate that the effects of this posture extend beyond rhetoric.

The first involves a student who applied to a Ph.D. program in biological psychology at an Oklahoma university. At the time of her application she had earned a masters in psychology, worked full-time in a lab doing health-care research, and taught at a local junior college. Her academic career had been stellar (a 4.0 average) and she had published research papers. She was recommended to the graduate program by her boss, the head of the lab which was closely affiliated with the graduate program. After an interview with the director of the program, she was accepted with full funding ($1300/month) and told she had been a "shoe-in." Delighted with the offer, she gave up an offer from another doctoral program and her part-time teaching position.

Shortly thereafter, she was notified by the director that she would be further interviewed, merely as a formality. However, this "formality" lasted 6 hours, with different members of the faculty interviewing her sequentially in pairs. The ordeal centered around concern about her affiliation with animal rights groups and whether she might be an "infiltrator." It appears that as an undergraduate she had been the winner of a research/essay contest sponsored by PSYETA and that currently she was involved in a vegetarian group. Her study had demonstrated that people shown photographs of animals in invasive experiments subsequently viewed animal research less favorably than a group shown pictures of animals in non-invasive experimental situations. It was also intimated that she had stolen some animal research data.

As a result of the interview, her fiscal support was withdrawn. The student decided to refuse admission to the program because of the financial issue, but, more importantly, because she felt she could not risk committing herself to a situation where hostility and suspicion of her was so great.

The second account has a more positive outcome, although the theme is the same. An undergraduate psychology major, enrolled in an upper level course in experimental psychology, requested an alternative lab exercise. In her formal request to the departmental committee, she indicated that her personal code of ethics prevented her from participating in a lab in which rats are deprived of food and water. Her offer to do an alternative lab involving software or another project was rejected and she was informed that she could not graduate without meeting the lab requirement. In discussion with her, her instructor indicated that she should not be in psychology and should change majors. Following letters to the dean from her and from PSYETA in her behalf, she was given the right to do an alternative lab with the stipulation that she provide the alternative and find an instructor to supervise her. She was able to do this by enlisting a psychologist at a campus 200 miles from her own.


2. MANDATING THE REPORTING OF ANIMAL ABUSE

In an earlier newsletter (Winter 1994), we noted that there is a growing body of evidence that violent behavior toward human and nonhuman animals are linked: violence toward animals is both a precursor and effect of violence toward and abuse of humans. We have described this linkage more fully in our slide presentation, The Culture of Violence: The Animal Connection, and in a coauthored cover story in The Animals' Agenda (March/April 1994), also under that title.

There are several important implications for change that follow from this "tangled web" of abuse. One is that changingthe ways in which the culture presents animals, e.g., the degree of violence toward animals in TV cartoons, may reduce violence in real settings toward both animals and humans. A second is that teaching empathy toward animals may reduce violence toward both classes of objects, and may increase empathy toward humans.

A third implication and the focus of a new PSYETA campaign involves the reporting of animal abuse. The American Psychological Association's (APA's) Working Group on Child Abuse and Neglect concluded that child protection systems should focus on early intervention and detection to reduce the number of incidents of child abuse. Reporting animal abuse is one way of implementing this early detection as, often, animals are the first victims in abusive family systems. Currently, two states, California and Colorado, require such reporting to law enforcement authorities. However, the obligation is limited to veterinarians and to certain species and activities - largely staged animal fights.

Such reporting should be mandated in much broader circumstances. We would like to see psychologists and allied health providers assume an obligation to report animal abuse.

At present, most states require medical and other health and social service personnel, including psychologists and allied mental health and educational counselors, to report instances of child abuse, as well as, in some states, abuse of the elderly and handicapped. For example, Massachusetts very broadly defines both what constitutes abuse and the class of occupations whose personnel are obligated to report abuse.

In the field of psychology, professional codes of ethics implicitly recognize this obligation. In its "Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct," The APA exempts practicing psychologists from maintaining the confidentiality of the client/therapist relation when such disclosure is mandated by law, particularly to protect the client or others from harm.

We feel that psychologists, particularly those of us interested in animal welfare, are in a position to spearhead policy changes in this area. For as a profession we both conduct the research that demonstrates the connection between violence to human and nonhuman animals and, in our practices, all too frequently confront instances of violence and abuse. This means that workers in both human and nonhuman animal settings should be obligated to cross-report - to report instances of violence and abuse to any living being to the appropriate authorities.

In the coming months, PSYETA will develop mechanisms to encourage such a policy. If any of you would like to be involved in this project or have some ideas about it, please contact the executive director, Ken Shapiro (301-963-4751), or the following members of the Board of Directors: Manny Bernstein (518-891-4140), Theo Capaldo (508-352-8175), or Lorin Lindner (310-477-3116).


3. MARCH FOR THE ANIMALS

On June 23, 1996, the animal advocacy community will gather at the Ellipse in Washington, DC for the second mass March for the Animals. Like that March in 1990, this event promises to be a historic moment. Organized by the National Alliance for Animals and sponsored by numerous groups, the march itself will be the culmination of a week of major events in the capital. The enclosed brochure describes the events and provides information about travel, accommodations, as well as suggestions about how you can help organize and promote World Animal Awareness Week in your locale.

PSYETA is pleased to be a sponsor and member of the planning committee of the 1996 March, as we were in the first March. We feel these gatherings are critical to the task of keeping animal issues before the public, to the continued expansion of the movement, and to promoting cohesiveness within the movement.

To provide a rallying point for psychologists and others who support us in this endeavor, PSYETA is hosting a social hour on the eve of the March. Featured guest speakers at the social hour are Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson, psychiatrist and coauthor of the highly acclaimed book When Elephants Weep: The Emotional Lives of Animals and Roger Fouts, cofounder of Friends of Washoe and PSYETA board member. Fouts forthcoming book on chimpanzee communication and efforts to obtain better treatment of primates in captivity is being considered for production as a full-length commercial movie.

Since we want to provide you an opportunity to meet with the guest speakers, as well as with members of the Board and staff of PSYETA, we are limiting the event to a small group. Please be sure to return the enclosed response card as soon as possible to reserve your space.


4. UPDATE ON NYU PSYCHOLOGIST CHARGED WITH VIOLATIONS BY USDA*

As reported in our July 1995 newsletter, in April of that year the US Department of Agriculture filed formal charges against Ron Wood for failing to inform oversight authorities of severe water deprivation conditions imposed on his monkey subjects and for inadequate veterinary care resulting in the death of three subjects in his primate addiction studies. Since then, his New York University- based laboratory has been closed down, the experiments suspended. Wood himself is on an indefinite leave of absence.

In a related incident, the USDA is investigating NYU for possible attempts to cover-up Wood's violations of the Animal Welfare Act (AWA) and for retaliation against Jan Moor-Jankowski, who blew the whistle on Wood. Former director of NYU's Laboratory for Experimental Medicine and Surgery in Primates (LEMSIP), Moor-Jankowski was fired without notice or explanation and LEMSIP was given to the Coulston Foundation, a New Mexico-based lab itself recently charged with violations of the AWA.

*Much of this information is from In Defense of Animals.


5. PSYETA ANNOUNCES BOARD OF ADVISORS

PSYETA is delighted to announce the formation of a Board of Advisors. The following respec ted animal advocates are offering their expertise: Birute Galdikas and Jane Goodall, foremost investigators and advocates of, respectively, orangutans and chimpanzees; Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson, coauthor of the recent important book on emotion in nonhuman animals; and Peter Singer, seminal animal rights philosopher. PSYETA wishes to thank Theo Capaldo, Roger Fouts, and Ken Shapiro for approaching our distinguished advisory board members to serve in this important capacity. 6. SUPPORT PSYETA


6. CONTRIBUTIONS AND BEQUESTS

Contributions. Thank you very much for your past support. Without your help, we cannot continue our work. Please check the mailing label on your envelope as it indicates the date when you last made a contribution. We appreciate your contribution on an annual, or if you prefer, more frequent basis. PSYETA is a 501(C)(3) non-profit organization; your contributions are tax deductible.

At the end of 1995 we asked you, through an appeal, to help us expand the Culture of Violence presentation into a video. We would like to thank those of you who gave so generously and enabled us to get this very important project off the ground.

Wish-list for 1996. Copier with automatic feed to cope with increased workload. Can anyone spare one?

Bequests. Persons wishing to become benefactors of PSYETA should consult an attorney or incorporate the following provisions carefully into their wills. "I bequeath to Psychologists for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, P.O. Box 1297, Washington Grove, MD 20880, the sum of _________" to be applicable to the general purposes of the organization. Or if so desired, you may designate a specific purpose for the money.
 

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