Introduction
Part I: A Foundational Understanding of Animal Property
Law
1: The Nexus of Animal Rights and the Rights of Nature
2: Biodiversity Loss as a Property Law Problem
Part II: Revealing the Existing Body of Animal Property
Rights
3: The Biological Origins of Property
4: Uncovering Animal Rights in Existing Property Law
Part III: A Roadmap for Property Ownership to Benefit
Biodiversity
5: Using Legal Trusts to Implement a System of Animal Property
Rights
6: Traditional Legal Pathways to Formalizing Animal Property
Rights
7: Leveraging Property Rights to Aid Biodiversity
8: Case Studies of Stakeholder Collaborations Managing Resource
Competition between Humans and Wildlife Case Study 1: Ranchers and
Wild Horses in the West
Case Study 2: Outsourcing Thick-Billed Parrot Recovery to
Mexico
Case Study 3: Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Scientific
Management of Caribou
Part IV: Analyzing the Potential of Animal Property
Ownership
9: Evaluating a Property-Based Approach to Biodiversity
Preservation
10: The Implications of Interspecies Ownership on Property
Theory
Conclusion: Are Animal Property Rights the Rights of Nature?
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Karen Bradshaw is professor of law and a Williard H. Pedrick Scholar at the Arizona State University Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law. She is also a faculty affiliate scholar with the Classical Liberal Institute at the New York University School of Law and a senior sustainability scientist at the Global Institute of Sustainability at Arizona State University. Bradshaw researches the intersection of property, administrative, natural resources, animal, and environmental law. She is coeditor of Wildfire Policy: Law and Economics Perspectives.
"In this fascinating and thought-provoking book, Bradshaw proposes
how We The People can use property law to fix human-caused problems
so we can arrest the flood of biodiversity loss. This argument is a
game-changing expansion in current legal thought. . . . Engrossing
and meticulously researched. . . . It represents an essential, and
positive, step forward in how we think about and deal with the
other species on this planet. Highly recommended."
*Forbes*
"With so many legal, political, and constitutional avenues closed,
the most promising strategy, influenced by Indigenous law, has been
to establish the ‘rights of nature.’ One such approach relies on
property law. Bradshaw, a law professor at Arizona State
University, argues that wildlife such as bison and elephants have
ancestral lands, and that they use, mark, and protect their
territory. ‘Deer do not hire lawyers,’ she writes in a new book,
Wildlife as Property Owners, but if deer did hire lawyers, they’d
be able to claim that, under the logic of the law of property, they
should own their habitats."
*Atlantic*
"A heat haze settles on the bees buzzing among the flowers in
Bradshaw’s yard. As she walks her property, a bush rattles with
motion as a rabbit dashes past, startling a flock of quail. Within
the next few months, this parcel of land will become one of the
first in Phoenix to be legally owned by wildlife. Bradshaw, a
professor of law at Arizona State University, is putting into
practice a novel theory explained in her new book, Wildlife as
Property Owners. . . . In her book, Bradshaw explains that the best
way to transfer ownership to wildlife would be through a trust.
With wildlife as the beneficiaries, the land would be managed by a
human trustee, who would have a fiduciary duty to act in the best
interest of the animals.”
*Arizona Republic*
"Drawing on Indigenous legal systems and the ideas of philosophers
and property law theorists before her, Bradshaw argues that wild
animals should be integrated into our system of property law to
prevent further habitat destruction—the leading cause of species
extinction."
*Revelator*
"The provocative book Wildlife as Property Owners . . .
argues that wild animals also have a property right in the 'home'
where they live. And home, of course, here has a much broader sense
than what we humans are used to thinking. A topical issue in this
strange period: due to the pandemic, in many parts of the globe,
animals have returned to appropriate areas that human encroachments
had stolen from them. Animals that, in Bradshaw's logic, try to
return to their legitimate homes. Giving them a property right also
provides a legal framework to prevent the mass extinction feared by
UN scientists (one million animals and plants at risk). The
researcher suggests the creation of legal-patrimonial 'trusts' for
wildlife. Giving humans the monopoly of ownership has proved
disastrous for all living beings: landowners expropriate natural
habitat because of a system that has artificially stripped wildlife
of their interests. If the problem is property law—she argues—it
can also be the solution. Already today it includes nonhuman
owners. Ships and corporations have owned property for decades; why
not the bison?"
*Corriere della Sera (translated from Italian)*
"Fascinating. . . . . An extremely timely addition to books and
essays that focus on the lives and rights of nonhuman animals
(animals) and the complicated and often vexing relationships they
have with us. My learning curve was vertical as she wove in
information from numerous disciplines including different aspects
of legal scholarship, ethology and cognitive ethology (the study of
animal minds), and the social sciences in an easy-to-read fashion.
. . . [A] landmark book."
*Psychology Today*
World Changing Ideas Awards 2021: Politics and Policy Honorable
Mention
*Fast Company*
"The eminently relevant question that Karen Bradshaw invites us to
ponder, in her recent book Wildlife as Property Owners, concerns
the risks of mismatching standards.The author, a law professor in
Arizona, denounces the fact that the protection of wildlife in the
United States is based on requirements of a legislative nature
(statutory protection). However, the fundamental cause of the
degradation of wildlife is found in the exercise of the right to
property, which is granted only to individuals. There is therefore
an unfortunate 'mismatch'. Wildlife should also have access to
property if it is in everyone's interest to truly guarantee its
preservation.The proposal is innovative and nevertheless perfectly
in tune with the times: in environmental law, the trend is to
rethink the Civil Code, to question the discourse on property, to
think of rights for nature"
*Law & Society*
"Bradshaw argues that the effects of the presumption that only
people can own land are disastrous for both wildlife and
humans—that anthropocentric property is a key driver of
biodiversity loss, a silent killer of species worldwide. She
concludes that folding animals into our existing system of property
law, giving them the opportunity to own land, is a solution worthy
of consideration."
*Law & Social Inquiry*
"I recommend this book for all who are interested in the
preservation of biodiversity. It will surely be the focus of
graduate seminars in law schools, but it should also be read by
biologists and conservationists. It is thought provoking, well
written, and should be taken seriously."
*The Quarterly Review of Biology*
“In our time of rapidly shrinking animal habitats and threatened
biodiversity, we urgently need new ideas. Karen Bradshaw has
written a bold, exhilarating book that mines the traditional
concepts of property law for new proposals about how humans can
contribute to ethically defensible coexistence. This is the
most original contribution to animal law in a long time.”
*Martha C. Nussbaum, Law School and Philosophy Department, The
University of Chicago*
“Bradshaw's Wildlife as Property Owners is a wonderfully fresh
look at how humans impact the lives of nonhuman animals (animals).
We are now deeply immersed in the Anthropocene, a period I like to
call ‘The Rage of Inhumanity,’ during which we not only rob
other animals of their very lives, but also steal their
homes when it works for us with little concern for them. When
nonhumans are granted the right to own their homes, rather
than merely renting them from us, it will be a gamechanger for
fostering coexistence in which they and we are partners, rather
than adversaries.”
*Marc Bekoff, University of Colorado, author of "The Animals'
Agenda" and "Canine Confidential"*
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