Ethics of Research involving animals
Foreword
The issues addressed in this Report have been a subject of intense public debate over at least the past four hundred years. Feelings are strong on all sides of the issues, and in recent years reports of violent action against those conducting animal research in the UK have brought the matter to the forefront of public attention.
Members of the Working Party, like members of the public, hold many different and sometimes opposing views. Nevertheless, the group has been able to conduct its inquiry in an atmosphere conducive to gaining a better understanding of the scientific and ethical issues involved, and avoiding the polarisation of views which has so often stifled proper debate. It is in this spirit that we present our Report.
Throughout the Working Party’s meetings, many varied opinions were quite properly represented and argued through, and we have tried to analyse the ethical bases on which different opinions are held. A respect for the basis of beliefs different from one's own has enabled members of the group to agree on a consensus statement and to present conclusions and recommendations which, while not always necessarily representing the views of all, do as comprehensively as possible offer a clarification of the debate. Where widely different views are held, we have sought to set them out as clearly as possible. This approach, we believe, should contribute to fair and balanced discussions among individuals and to decision making by those in government or other official and regulatory bodies.
We have been conscious that conclusions about the use of animals involved in research, diverse as this is, must be seen in the wider context of the use of animals in food, in clothing, as pets and as working animals in farming and other occupations. Science, however, is progressing rapidly in new technologies such as cloning, genetic modification and also in the development of alternatives to the use of animals. The Report sets out in some detail the range of scientific uses of animals including the uses being made of these new advances. It considers the ethical issues of research involving animals in the light of these developments, the implications for regulation, and the provision of information and education.
As Chair of the Working Group, I would like to record my thanks to all members, who have worked so hard to produce a Report which, I hope, will genuinely provide helpful analysis and insight into this topic, often at great personal cost. I also thank the Council for their help and advice throughout the two years of the Group's work. We all owe a great debt also to the Secretariat who have taken the burden of producing a long and comprehensive Report, agreed as fair and balanced by the Group as well as by those who so helpfully read and refereed early drafts for us. I should like to pay special tribute to Harald Schmidt, Secretary to the Working Party, whose skills and knowledge were invaluable.
We hope that the Report will be a useful starting point of reference for all those concerned with this important issue in the time ahead.
Baroness Perry of Southwark