Animaladies Exhibition – Catalogue & Postcards available
The Animaladies Catalogue is available here. Following on from the showing of Duck Lake Redux, 2016 at Animaladies – The Duck Lake Project is now online – focusing on AASA […]
The Animaladies Catalogue is available here. Following on from the showing of Duck Lake Redux, 2016 at Animaladies – The Duck Lake Project is now online – focusing on AASA […]
The journal Animal Issues, published in 8 issues between 1997 – 2000, is now online. The aim of the journal Animal Issues was to investigate philosophical and ethical issues related
Works to be exhibited at ANIMALADIES exhibition and postcard project, Interlude Gallery, Glebe, 11 – 22 July 2016. Andre Brodyk Autopoietic Blur (2016). Microscopy image of living transgenic E.coli Acknowledgement: Dr Ian
From The Animal & Society Institute: Over the past few months ASI’s Human-Animal Programs Director Lisa Lunghofer presented a series of three webinars about the impact of animal abuse on
Undergraduate Paper Prize The Animals & Society Institute (ASI) and Wesleyan Animal Studies (WAS) invite applications for the fourth annual undergraduate prize competition for undergraduate students pursuing research in Human-Animal
Thom van Dooren has co-edited a special issue of Environmental Humanities entitled ‘Multispecies Studies’, along with Ursula Munster, Eben Kirksey, Deborah Bird Rose, Matthew Chrulew and Anna Tsing. Articles include:
The latest edition of the Animal Studies Journal was initially conceived by associate editor Sally Borrell who framed the call for papers with a quote from Margaret Atwood’s novel Oryx
The Conference Program for Animaladies is now available at the HARN: Human Animal Research Network website. Over 2 days there will be 8 panel sessions, a keynote by Professor Lori
Lucy’s Project will present the second annual conference on animals affected by domestic violence, bringing together speakers from Australia and across the globe to talk about the challenges, triumph and
The Animals in Society Working Group, based at Flinders University, SA have started a new series called ‘Why Animal Studies?’. In their first post Niki Rust reflects on the way