Economics of Animal Welfare: Call for Abstracts

By Bob Fischer, anya marchenko, Kevin Kuruc @ 2023-11-16T16:50 (+86)

Brown University’s Department of Economics and Center for Philosophy, Politics, and Economics are hosting an interdisciplinary conference on the economics of animal welfare on July 11–12, 2024

This conference aims to build on successful workshops on this topic at Duke University, Stanford University, and the Paris School of Economics. We welcome submissions on a range of topics that apply economic methods to understand how to value or improve animal welfare. This includes theoretical work on including losses or benefits to animals in economic analyses, applied empirical work on the effects of policies or industry structure on animal welfare, and anything else within the purview of economics as it relates to the well-being of commodity, companion, or wild animals.

We invite 300-word abstracts from economists and those in relevant fields, including animal welfare science, political science, and philosophy. In addition to full presentations, we also welcome “ideas in development” from graduate students or early-stage researchers that can be presented in less than 10 minutes. 

Please submit abstracts and ideas-in-progress by January 15, 2024 via this form. General attendance registration will open in January 2024.

 

 

ORGANIZED BY:

Bob Fischer, Department of Philosophy, Texas State University

Anya Marchenko, Department of Economics, Brown University

Kevin Kuruc, Population Wellbeing Initiative, University of Texas at Austin


david_reinstein @ 2023-11-17T21:20 (+5)

This sounds very welcome. I wanted to mention that The Unjournal is looking to expand our agenda and our team of field specialists into this area in particular. We have a few economists with an interest in animal welfare involved, but we are looking for a few more to have a sort of quorum. Please reach out if you are interested. 

david_reinstein @ 2024-03-09T00:04 (+2)

We now have a good team in this area (still looking for more).

We're now particular interested in people submitting and suggesting research in this area for The Unjournal to evaluate.

Dylan Richardson @ 2023-11-19T13:38 (+1)

Great! Perhaps at a conference like this, dedicated to this particular field of inquiry, there could be commitment to start writing papers in a non-anthropocentric fashion? There's a problem I've written about before where academics tend to presume the obvious human interests on topics like climate change and environmental harms where discourse norms are normalized, but for anything pertaining to animal welfare, they slip into "and animal rights groups have historically called for", rather than "lessened meat-eating (or other adjacent welfare concern) lessens animal suffering".

This is less problematic in philosophy and in economics to a degree, but it tends to persist in other sciences. Part of the problem is a lack of interdisciplinary connection - just what this conference is posed to help with!