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Annotated Bibliography
Topic: The Difference Between Kill and No-Kill Animal Shelters
Arluke, Arnold. "The no-kill controversy: Manifest and latent sources of tension." (2003).
Animals are kept in shelters, but the number of places in them is limited, and all shelters are overpopulated says Arluke. Killing thought as for granted, viewed as a “obligatory evil” with no substitute. One cause shelter employee have been able to uphold this perception is that, till the past few years, little if any planned condemnation occurred at big level. For some cases, SPCA (society for the prevention of cruelty to animals) has contained the no-kill notion, while in the other it has not. “The idea of welfare could help aptly as one superordinate idea to bond somewhat than rift the shelter community”( Arluke82)
Brown, William P., and Kelsey T. Morgan. "Age, breed designation, coat color, and coat pattern
influenced the length of stay of cats at a no-kill shelter." Journal of applied animal welfare science 18.2 (2015): 169-180.
“Adoption accounts from 2 no kill shelters in New York State were inspected to find out how age, sex, size, breed, and coat color inclined the length of stay (LOS) of dogs at various shelters”(Brown and Kelsy3). It is found that the coat designing, and breed considered LOS in together cats and kittens. It is also revealed that female cats and kittens may have longer LOS than male cats or kittens, correspondingly. It is suggested that the animals that have come to the shelter should be fed, treated, vaccinated, and looked for their owners. If after the expiration of the period of overexposure the owner is not located, some dogs are put to sleep painlessly, others are left to live their life in a natural way.
Brown, William P., Janelle P. Davidson, and Marion E. Zuefle. "Effects of phenotypic
characteristics on the length of stay of dogs at two no kill animal shelters." Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science 16.1 (2013): 2-18.
Animal shelters are created for the purpose of carrying out activities for keeping animals, including animals without owners, or those animals, the ownership of which the owners refused. Animal shelters are housed in buildings, structures, and structures specially designed for this purpose. According to him, no one is monitoring the fullness of shelters, and there is no single supervisory authority in this area. Considerable money is allocated for trapping and maintenance. The benefit from the lack of a harmonious legal framework is trapping companies and officials of local municipalities, since the killing of street animals is the most corrupt, most expensive and most inefficient practice in the world.
Lucich, Jennifer. "Thou shalt not kill." E: The environmental magazine 16.3 (2005): 14-16.
The main concern is stray dogs, which, straying in packs, can attack people, threatening not only their health, but also life. The “no-kill” shelter movement, is the one can help to save the lives of many animals (keeping euthanasia just for animals that can’t be rehabilitated), is an effort to disrupt that grey cycle. The statistics shows that there are above 5,000 outdated shelters in the America, and just of those , 250 are no kill. How many people died after 2011 is unknown? In addition, stray dogs are carriers of many infectious diseases, including deadly ones, and also harm ecosystems. They destroy smaller animals that live in the city, destroy bird nests, dare to attack even deer and elk. Meanwhile, the country does not have a single federal legislation in the field of regulating the number of stray animals, and methods for solving the problem vary by region. According to experts, the problem of stray animals requires immediate action. It can be solved only by joint efforts of federal, regional and local authorities, public organizations, volunteers and each person personally.
Works cited
Arluke, Arnold. "The no-kill controversy: Manifest and latent sources of tension." (2003).
Brown, William P., and Kelsey T. Morgan. "Age, breed designation, coat color, and coat pattern
influenced the length of stay of cats at a no-kill shelter." Journal of applied animal welfare science 18.2 (2015): 169-180.
Brown, William P., Janelle P. Davidson, and Marion E. Zuefle. "Effects of phenotypic
characteristics on the length of stay of dogs at two no kill animal shelters." Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science 16.1 (2013): 2-18.
Lucich, Jennifer. "Thou shalt not kill." E: The environmental magazine 16.3 (2005): 14-16.
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