Dear Friends,
You are invited to a landmark animal protection and law event in South Africa (and online)!
Join us for a first-of-its-kind event in South Africa, a Colloquium on ‘Transforming Animal Protection Legislation in South Africa: A Constitutional Imperative’.
📅 Dates: 5 & 6 May 2025
🕘 Time: 9:00 AM - 5:30 PM SAST (both days)
📍 Online & In-person [Zoom & @University of Johannesburg, Kerzner Building]
This 2-day hybrid colloquium brings together a powerful network of legal minds, government representatives, scientists, civil society leaders, judges, prosecutors, veterinarians, academics, activists and members of the public to chart a bold new course for animal protection in the country, grounded in our progressive Constitution and in pursuit of achieving inclusive justice.
Co-hosted by Animal Law Reform South Africa (ALRSA), Humane World for Animals Africa and the South African Institute for Advanced Constitutional, Public, Human Rights and International Law (SAIFAC) [collectively the Animal Law Project], it offers a critical platform to engage with and advocate for transformative animal law reform.
Why This Matters:
The South African government, through the Department of Agriculture, is currently overhauling the regulatory regime for animals through the drafting of a new ‘Animal Welfare Bill’. The existing animal ‘protection’ regime consists of antiquated laws, some 90 years old, passed during the abhorrent system of apartheid, and which are not aligned with our new constitutional ethos. Nearly a decade ago, South Africa’s Constitutional Court affirmed that animals are sentient beings with intrinsic value and connected human rights to the protection of animal interests - yet, the law has not been updated with this approach. As government initiates work on this new bill, it is critical that they develop a law that recognises these issues and developments.
This Colloquium builds on the Animal Law Project’s widely-endorsed ‘Manifesto for Transformin
Appreciate you all hosting this AMA. I do have three questions related to what grants ACE might be open to considering.
1. Is there a time when ACE might consider funding ballot initiative proposals that go further in their ask than the initiatives we saw in 2024?
2. What impact from ballot initiatives would ACE consider worthwhile? And are there specific metrics you would be hoping campaigns use to measure their impact?
3. Are there other ways ACE may be interested in supporting ballot initiative campaigns that they may not choose to fund directly?
Hi David, thanks for your questions!
- We don’t have predetermined criteria for which ballot measures we would or wouldn’t fund, and proposals are assessed on a case-by-case basis. That said, 3 out of the 4 U.S. measures run in 2024 were unsuccessful, including the Denver fur ban, which we expected to perform better. Given that, we are more pessimistic that more radical measures can be achieved through ballot initiatives. We supported ProAnimal Future and Sentient Politics in part to capture insights from those campaigns, which will inform our future grantmak
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