Animals’ right to privacy denied by documentary-makers30/04/2010 16:27:53
Are we invading these ducks privacy by photographing them? April 2010. Dr Brett Mills from the University of East Anglia argues that while wildlife programmes can play a vital role in engaging citizens in environmental debates, in order to 'do good' they must inevitably deny many species the right to privacy. ‘Animals have a right to privacy' Dr Mills' study, 'Television wildlife documentaries and animals' right to privacy', analyses the 'making of' documentaries that accompanied the BBC wildlife series Nature's Great Events (2009). Exploring the debates on ethics, animal welfare and rights and human rights, Dr Mills suggests that animals have a right to privacy but this is turned into a challenge for the production teams, who use newer forms of technology to overcome species' desire not to be seen. "The aim of the research is to encourage debate, especially within the contemporary environmental context where it is now commonplace for us to question the impact of human movement and behaviour around the globe," explained Dr Mills, a senior lecturer in the School of Film and Television Studies. "In addition, though, perhaps there is an argument for some species, in some circumstances, not to be filmed. At the moment it seems that such arguments are never put forward." An important debate?It strikes Wildlife Extra that Dr Mills has too much time on his hands. While we fully support ethical film making, to spend his time and the universities cash on such a topic seems a ridiculous waste. Wild animals don't burrow because they are shy. They don't hide in the bushes because they can't face the cameras. They do these things because they are afraid of being eaten. If no one made any wildlife films, we wouldn't know about the plight of the mountain gorilla. If no one bothered to peer down burrows, perhaps the Black-footed ferret would be extinct by now. Taking the entire population of Californian condors into captivity was a major intrusion into their human rights - It did save them from extinction, but what a terrible invasion of their privacy. Does Dr Mills think that scientists should only conduct non-invasive research? How do we find out more about the world we live in, and find how to mitigate many of the man made problems without peering down holes and sticking cameras up trees? Dr Mills is a senior lecturer on film and television studies at the University of East Anglia. No doubt his vital research (he specialises in the study of sitcoms!) will make the world a better place; or perhaps with the current need to cut the government's overdraft, the vital study of sitcoms might be a place to start? Ethical concerns At the heart of the documentary project is the necessity for animals to be seen. Dr Mills suggests that this necessity itself raises a series of ethical concerns, but these seem to be sidelined in the moral debates surrounding wildlife documentaries. The use of sophisticated aerial technology to film animals, for example, is justified because it does not disturb them, yet the question of whether it is appropriate to film animals in this way is not raised. Underpinning such action is an assumption that animals have no right to privacy, and that the camera crew have no need to determine whether those animals consent to being filmed. Unlike human activities, a distinction of the public and the private is not made in the animal world. There are many activities which animals engage in which are common to wildlife documentary stories but which are rendered extremely private in the human realm; mating, giving birth, and dying are recurring characteristics in nature documentaries, but the human version of these activities remains largely absent from broadcasting. Dr Mills said: "It might at first seem odd to claim that animals might have a right to privacy. Privacy, as it is commonly understood, is a culturally human concept. The key idea is to think about animals in terms of the public/private distinction. We can never really know if animals are giving consent, but they often do engage in forms of behaviour which suggest they'd rather not encounter humans, and we might want to think about equating this with a desire for privacy.
Animals need their privacy too. A justification could be made for filming animals as they roam plains and deserts and engage in hunting activities because these are ‘public' events, which take place in locations which include many other animals, and in which the animal being filmed makes no explicit attempt to not be seen. Yet animal activities which might equate with human notions of the private are treated in a way which suggests the public/private distinction does not hold. For example, many species could be read as desiring not to be seen - animals in burrows and nests have constructed a living space which equates with the human concept of the home, and commonly do this in locations which are, by their very nature, explicitly hidden, often for practical purposes. "Human notions of privacy which rest on ideas of location or activity are ignored in terms of animals. It doesn't matter what an animal does, or where it does it, it will be deemed fair game for the documentary," said Dr Mills. Distinctions between the public and private are enshrined within broadcasting regulations, with privacy placed within ethical categories of human rights. Central to broadcasters' relationship with its public is that in order to be filmed, the public must first offer their consent. If they don't, broadcasters must not infringe privacy unless there is a pressing justification to do so. "While never made explicit, such regulations assume that such ethics are applicable to humans only," said Dr Mills. "The ethical standards applying to wildlife programmes are predominately predicated on ensuring that ‘audiences should never be deceived or misled by what they see or hear', that is the ‘contract with the viewer' is prioritised over the rights of the animals. In doing so, an assumption is made here about the differences between humans and animals, which have been at the heart of debates over animal rights and the ethical treatment of animals for millennia. "The environmental and educational aspects of wildlife documentaries are assumed to trump ethical concerns about animals' privacy. It is an impressive piece of ethical manipulation, whereby privacy, so enshrined within the concepts of rights for humans, becomes merely a ‘realm' which documentary makers can enter, justifying their actions as ones for the benefit of the very species whose rights are being moralised away." Published in the current issue of Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies.
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There must be something in the air down there in East Anglia....first we had Prof Phil Jones and his imaginative - or is it imaginary? - global warming tosh, and now another nutc... sorry , "scientist" banging on about animals' right to privacy?!?
what next, for Goodness sake? Has the world gone mad?
Posted by: Andrew Aiken | 07 May 2010 20:32:12
Dr Mills seems to have found an ideal occupation - wasting his time and public money on something that is absolutely no use to man or beast.
If only I'd thought of it first . . .!
Posted by: Harry Bowden | 07 May 2010 16:33:08
In an afterword to a new edition of his classic book ‘Of Wolves and Men’ (Schreiber 2004). on wolves in North America, Barry Lopez considered the current state of knowledge and the recent efforts to reintroduce wolves to their former habitats in America. He believes that “In the reintroduction of wolves we have demonstrated that we are more capable now of living in a give and take relationship with the natural world than we were”. Unfortunately, Lopez tempers that thought with some caution when he calls for restraint in our never-ending analysing of wolf populations:
“Interpreting wolf research too strictly along these lines, like placing too strong an emphasis on the significance of a predators “territory”, requires many large animals to carry the freight of human constructs, including “ownership” and “authority”, baggage no animal should be asked to bear”
Thus Lopez wasn’t concerned about whether a wolf had feelings, he was just fed up with wolves constantly being prodded and poked in the cause of us humans feeling guilty about how we had drastically reduced their range.
I was reminded of this when I read the Forestry Commission press release on the 30 year tawny owl project in Kielder forest where investigating the contents of nest boxes and ringing each years chicks has led to the startling “discovery” that the vole population rocketed during last winter as hunting by tawnies was curtailed by the conditions, but this vole explosion was now benefiting tawny owl chicks. For eight quid you can join the ringers on two owl nights in May. If I was a tawny owl I’d move, but then where would I go to find to find the woodland habitat I needed in Britain, and which wasn’t being bashed about in the name of conservation orthodoxy.
These intrusions have perhaps more impact than the filming that Brett Mills ponders the ethics of, but they are symptomatic of our arrogant assumptions and the intrusive nature of our constant meddling. The push for our greater familiarisation with wild nature through the visual media is supposedly a driver for its better protection. However, as is shown by the context of the “2020 for a wilder Britain” visual media initiative, there is no mission to reflect on the secondary nature of most habitat in Britain and in which the filming will be done, only gawp at the wildlife that is there on sufferance.
www.self-willed-land.org.uk
Posted by: Mark Fisher | 01 May 2010 11:53:35