Ruth Harrison
Ruth Harrison OBE (24 June 1920 – 13 June 2000), was a British animal welfare activist and author.[1]
She was the daughter of the author Stephen Winsten.
As a Quaker and as a conscientious objector during the Second World War, she served in the Friends Ambulance Unit, first in Hackney, London, and then with displaced persons in Schleswig-Holstein and Bochum in Germany.
In 1964 she published Animal Machines, which describes intensive poultry and livestock farming.[2] The book was said to have exposed the whole reality of intensive farming.[3] It was published in seven countries and was the inspiration for the European Convention for the Protection of Animals Kept for Farming Purposes.[4] In 1986 she was awarded an OBE.
The Australian ethicist Peter Singer has said that reading Animal Machines was important in his becoming a vegetarian and adopting the views that he sets out in Animal Liberation.[5]
References
- ↑ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography accessed 28/03/08
- ↑ Title Advances in animal welfare in New Zealand accessed 28/03/08
- ↑ Vegan Views (influences) accessed 28/03/08
- ↑ Animal Welfare Quarterly accessed 28/03/08
- ↑ Singer, Peter (2001). "Animal Liberation: A Personal View". Writings on an ethical life. London: Fourth Estate. p. 294. ISBN 1841155500.
External links
- Animal Welfare Quarterly - A Tribute to Ruth Harrison
- Defra HTML document at the Wayback Machine (archived August 1, 2003)