Last update: 2025-11-15
Preparatory notes for this chapter:
Large-scale, lab-grown meat: Step inside a cultivated meat factory
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Here is a clear overview of suffering-focused initiatives centered on non-human animals, grouped by type and by philosophical orientation. These include research programs, nonprofits, advocacy movements, and academic fields that explicitly aim to reduce animal suffering—sometimes with a special focus on wild animals or global-scale suffering.
1. Organizations Focused on Reducing Animal Suffering
A. Effective Altruism–Aligned Animal-Welfare Groups
These groups explicitly aim to reduce total suffering as much as possible, often using cost-effectiveness analysis.
🐾 Animal Ethics
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Pioneers in the field of wild animal suffering (WAS).
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Produces research, outreach, and educational material about helping wild animals.
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Frames the reduction of suffering—especially involuntary suffering—as a moral priority.
🐾 Wild Animal Initiative (WAI)
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Builds an academic field focused on understanding and improving the welfare of wild animals at scale.
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Funds scientific research into population biology, welfare biology, and interventions.
🐾 Rethink Priorities
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Conducts research on animal welfare, wild animal suffering, insect suffering, invertebrate sentience, and moral weight.
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Influences funding flows in suffering-focused philanthropy.
🐾 Faunalytics
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Provides data and research on how to best reduce animal suffering.
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Supports activism, policy, and movement strategy.
🐾 Good Food Institute (GFI) and The Humane League
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Work to reduce suffering through alternatives to factory farming.
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Their mission is not explicitly “suffering-focused,” but they are major players in reducing total animal harm.
2. Philanthropic Foundations and Funding Bodies
🐾 Open Philanthropy – Farm Animal Welfare Program
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The largest global funder of efforts to reduce farm animal suffering.
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Focuses on cage-free reforms, alternative proteins, and global policy.
🐾 Survival and Flourishing Fund (SFF)
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Funds projects with a strong suffering-focused or longtermist component, including work on animal welfare and WAS.
🐾 Sentience Institute
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Studies long-term strategies for moral circle expansion, with special emphasis on the moral inclusion of non-human animals.
3. Research Fields and Academic Initiatives
A. Welfare Biology
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A proposed scientific field devoted to studying sentient individuals’ wellbeing in nature.
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Includes population dynamics, ecology, behavioral biology, and welfare science.
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Concept developed by thinkers such as Yew-Kwang Ng and expanded by Animal Ethics and WAI.
B. Wild Animal Suffering Studies
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Interdisciplinary research on:
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Causes of suffering in nature (predation, disease, starvation)
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Feasible interventions
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Moral theory underlying large-scale interventions
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C. Invertebrate Sentience and Welfare Science
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Studying which taxa are sentient and how much they suffer.
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Research centers include:
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Rethink Priorities
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Open Philanthropy grantees
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Various academic labs in animal cognition
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4. Movements or Approaches with a Suffering-Focused Orientation
A. Anti-Speciesism Movement
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Includes philosophers and activists arguing that preventing suffering is morally urgent regardless of species.
B. Negative Utilitarian and Suffering-Focused Ethics Communities
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Subgroups within moral philosophy or effective altruism that prioritize minimizing suffering (over maximizing pleasure).
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Non-human animals are central to their practical focus.
C. Compassionate Conservation (subset)
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Not all of it is suffering-focused, but some strands advocate helping individual animals instead of merely protecting ecosystems.
D. Animal Rights and Abolitionist Movements
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While not always suffering-focused philosophically, many activists are motivated by minimizing or ending animal suffering across farming, research, and entertainment.
5. Initiatives Focused on Specific Domains
🐾 Factory Farming
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Cage-free campaigns
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Broiler chicken welfare reforms
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Fish welfare initiatives
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Lobbying for legislation against extreme confinement
🐾 Wild Animals
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Contraception programs to prevent explosive population cycles
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Vaccination programs (e.g., rabies, distemper)
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Research into humane insect management
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Habitat modification to reduce extreme suffering (e.g., providing shelter or water sources)
🐾 Invertebrates & Insects
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Studying welfare of trillions of farmed and wild invertebrates
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Investigating humane insecticide alternatives
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Considering welfare in insect farming and biological control
6. Explicitly Suffering-Focused Thinkers and Movements
These are not organizations, but they influence suffering-focused animal initiatives.
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Brian Tomasik (Essays on Reducing Suffering)
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Magnus Vinding (Suffering-Focused Ethics, S-risk literature)
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David Pearce (The Hedonistic Imperative; abolition of suffering)
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Yew-Kwang Ng (coined “welfare biology”)
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Communities discussing s-risks, negative utilitarianism, and “minimized-suffering futures”