ABSTRACT

Domestic animals are an integral component of human leisure experience and can enhance the physical, social, and mental wellbeing of humans. The interplay of human and animal experiences of justice, wellbeing, rights, and roles within leisure is the central theme of this book. Research explores the position of domesticated animals in human leisure experiences, in a wide array of leisure settings. Chapters question whether domestic animals may have a desire for leisure that is different from human leisure, whether animals have and wish to fulfil needs for meaningful leisure or non-leisure, and whether human leisure needs and desires may coincide or contradict wellbeing interests of animals.

This book provides a venue for the dissemination and exploration of research, which champions the welfare and rights of these animals to have their needs and interests in leisure recognised. It moves the debate about animals in leisure beyond the current limits which have seen research mainly confined to the exotic ‘other’ rather than more mundane, everyday domestic animals. This book will be of interest to individuals in the fields of tourism ethics, zoology, animal behaviour, and leisure studies.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|20 pages

Behind bars

Contradictions in the expectations and experiences of life with marginalised companion animals

chapter 3|15 pages

Dog shows as casual leisure

Asymmetry of human and animal experience

chapter 4|16 pages

Dog showing and training

Enjoyable hobbies or destructive practices that reinforce speciesist ideologies?

chapter 5|19 pages

Off-leash recreation in an urban national recreation area

Conflict between domesticated dogs, wildlife and semi-domesticated humans

chapter 7|15 pages

Recentring companion species wellbeing in the leisure experience

Towards multispecies flourishing through dog walking

chapter 9|18 pages

From labour to leisure

The relocation of animals in modern Western society

chapter 11|25 pages

Pampered prisoners

Meeting the ethological needs of the modern sport horse to enhanced equine welfare

chapter 12|19 pages

Human-initiated animal fights

chapter 13|14 pages

Domestic animals’ leisure, rights, wellbeing

Nuancing ‘domestic’, asymmetries and into the future