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Breeding: A Moral Choice?


Brenda Bonnett

Viewed: 1,860 times

Thanks to Kevin Colwill for his thoughtful piece entitled "Breeding: Is it a moral choice" in the Our Dogs Newspaper and thanks to both for permission to reproduce here.

In this concise yet thought-provoking article Kevin discusses his thoughts on the question:  

When it comes to breeding pedigree dogs, how much is too much and how far is going too far?

Some points worth considering:

  • Issues in extreme breeds reflect on all breeders.  Certainly, negative attention in the media moves quickly from one particular issue or breed and soon expands to include all pedigreed dogs;  Beyond that, legislation meant to address specific problems/breeds may result in broad restrictions on breeding - and often undesirable and unfortunate (even for the dogs) consequences.  
  • Although he says "Each breed is its own unique little, or not so little, community" and implies that trying to make blanket decisions for the massive diversity of breeds presents challenges. However, he is also saying that many issues, especially ethical ones, should apply across all breeds and breeding and cannot be left to e.g. individual breed clubs.  The International Partnership for Dogs (IPFD) is founded on the principal that although individuals may operate within a limited community - local or national - dogs and dog breeding are a global phenomenon and many challenges must be considered and addressed with an international - and multi-disciplinary - perspective.
  • "Breed clubs aren’t defending the time-honoured look of the breed. They’re defending a relatively modem interpretation of how their breed should look."  Here he is debunking the claims of some that extreme dogs must look the way they do to preserve the history and traditional of the breed, when, in fact, many/most breeds were originally both more moderate and more diverse in appearance.
  • His suggestion that "the KC must be much more hard¬nosed in confronting breed clubs and insisting on change."  Many KCs and breed clubs, especially throughout Europe are confronting the issues head-on. However, there seems to be resistance from breeders, judges and others.  Support from the broader community of breeders to implement change is needed.

For many years, lecturing about breed-specific issues in dogs, even before the existence of IPFD, in discussions with the breeding community, veterinarians and others, it was becoming self-evident that if concerns were not addressed by the dog community, society would likely impose 'solutions' on them.  This is coming to fruition in many areas, and society and the media wants to move at a much faster pace than many in the pedigreed dog world.  I think Kevin Colwill's call to action by KCs, and all ethical breeders - not limited to those in specifically affected breeds - is timely and important to consider.

 

kevin-colwell-column---dog-talk---breeding-is-it-a-moral-choice.png

 

 

 

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