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  • About The Authors

kathy archibald is director of Safer Medicines Trust, Kingsbridge, England. She has a BSc (Hons) Genetics from the University of Nottingham. Besearch interests include safety and toxicity testing of medicines. Email: Kathy@SaferMedicines.org

keri cronin is an associate professor in the Department of Visual Arts at Brock University (St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada). She is also a faculty affiliate in Brock's Social Justice and Equity Studies graduate program and a founding member of the Social Justice Besearch Institute at Brock. She is the author of Manufacturing National Park Nature: Photography, Ecology, and the Wilderness Industry of Jasper (UBC Press, 2012) and the coeditor (with Kirsty Bobertson) of Imagining Resistance: Visual Culture and Activism in Canada (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2010). Her current academic research explores the ways in which late 19th- and early 20th-century animal advocacy groups used art and visual culture in their campaigns. Email: Keri.Cronin@brocku.ca

laura donnellan teaches European Union law and sport and law at the University of Limerick, Ireland. She is also an external examiner for the bachelor of laws degree at the Dublin Business School. Her publications include "Bestiality and the Law: A Form of Animal Protection or Protection of Public Morals?" in Jeremiah Weaver's Animal Welfare: Assessment, Challenges and Improvement Strategies (Nova Science Publishers, 2016), and (with Susan Leahy) Sports Law in Ireland (2nd ed., Kluwer, 2016). She is an associate fellow of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics. Email: laura.donellan@ul.ie

justin r. goodman is an adjunct professor of sociology and global education at Marymount University. He was the director of government relations in the Laboratory Investigations Department at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. Besearch interests include scientific, ethical, and regulatory issues relating to experimentation on animals. Email: justinrossgoodman@gmail.com

crystal allen gunasekera, PhD, is an assistant professor of philosophy at Principia College in Elsah, Illinois. Her primary areas of research are ethics of war, environmental ethics, and animal ethics. She enjoys teaching a wide range of classes on theoretical and applied ethics. Email: crystal.allen-gunasekera@principia.edu

michael hauskeller is professor of philosophy at the University of Exeter. His publications include Biotechnology and the Integrity of Life (Ashgate, 2007), Better Humans? Understanding the Enhancement Project (Boutledge, 2013), and Mythologies of Transhumanism (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016). His research focuses on ethical issues (broadly construed). Email: m.hauskeller@exeter.ac.uk [End Page 117]

linda m. johnson is visiting professor of art history at the University of Michigan-Flint and a fellow of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics. Publications include "A Pre-Millennial Portrait During the Revocation of the Massachusetts Charter" in American Literature and the New Puritan Studies (Cambridge University Press, 2016) and "Animal Experimentation in Eighteenth Century Art: Joseph Wright of Derby" (Journal of Animal Ethics, 2016). Research interests include art history, environmental humanities, and animal ethics. Email: linjohdr@umich.edu

christopher ketcham, PhD, teaches business and ethics for the MMBA School at the University of Houston Downtown. He has coedited, with Jean Paul Louisot, Enterprise Risk Management: Issues and Cases (Wiley, 2014). He has chapters in Reconsidering the Meaning in Life (Philosophy of Life Publishers, 2015), Commercial Space Exploration: Ethics, Policy and Governance (Ashgate, 2015), and Explorations of Forgiveness, Vol. 1 (Vernon Press, 2016). Research interests include risk management, applied ethics, social justice, and East-West comparative philosophy. Email: chrisketcham@msn.com

lisa kramer is a professor at the University of Toronto in Canada. She conducts interdisciplinary work in the field of behavioral economics, including research that examines human psychology and the role of affect (emotions) on preferences and decisions. Her current research focus includes studies that examine the harms that arise to humans from the drug development industry's continued use of animal models and the efficacy of nudging (also known as choice architecture) in the animal advocacy movement. Her past studies on financial market seasonality related to seasonal mood variation has appeared in economics, finance, and psychology journals, including the American Economic Review and the Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis. Email: Lkramer@rot-man.utoronto.ca

chien-hui li is associate professor at the Department of History, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan. She...

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