Not all fun and games: The missing ethics of animals in tourism

Animals are a mainstay of global tourism development. They’re consumed in fishing and hunting, and used as part of “experiences” - horses in trail rides, marine mammals in theme parks, whale sharks for us to swim with. In Sea World USA, orcas (killer whales) are kept for the entertainment of the pub...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Macbeth, J.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: The Conversation Media Group 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://theconversation.com/not-all-fun-and-games-the-missing-ethics-of-animals-in-tourism-8986
https://researchportal.murdoch.edu.au/esploro/outputs/other/Not-all-fun-and-games-The/991005542340807891
Description
Summary:Animals are a mainstay of global tourism development. They’re consumed in fishing and hunting, and used as part of “experiences” - horses in trail rides, marine mammals in theme parks, whale sharks for us to swim with. In Sea World USA, orcas (killer whales) are kept for the entertainment of the public. We deprive them of their liberty to do this, but it is rarely questioned – except, ironically, when a captive orca kills or injures their human “trainer”, or when animal rights organisations launch a specific campaign on the issue. Recently, an article on The Conversation stated: Because animals don’t have the strong protections that come from legal personhood, we don’t give their interests serious consideration when we make decisions about habitat destruction. A similar problem occurs in tourism, where the denial of personhood,or failure to recognise the individual, leads to a lack of care for the rights and welfare of animals, even in so-called ecotourism.