If you poisoned your grandma’s cat or lit your neighbor’s dog on fire, you’d likely face felony charges. Yet countless animals in labs endure the same fate every day.
The international food and beverage company will no longer subject animals to cruel product testing.
PETA scientists are working with government and industry to end inhalation tests on animals.
From giving away cool high-tech gadgets to scoring a Lush Prize (yes, that Lush), here are three ways that scientists with the PETA International Science Consortium Ltd. are winning big for animals.
Get ready to have your day made.
Currently, Charles River Laboratories is responsible for one out of every two animals tormented in laboratories.
The USDA finds a decomposing, headless animal and decides that the best thing to do is give the breeder your money.
Good animal-free science is its own reward, but it’s sweeter when it comes with an award. Just ask Brett Winters, a toxicology doctoral student.
Libby’s transformation is a thing of beauty. This new video of her with her adoptive family says it all.
Big news from India this week: We’re one step closer to winning the fight to save horses from horrific suffering as living blood banks!
To save animals, we advocates use every tool at our disposal. PETA scientists have decided that it’s time to show some skin.
PETA India and the University of Delhi organize two-day workshop on modern testing methods.
PETA is decrying Charles River Laboratories for peddling misery and death by poisoning dogs, rabbits, mice, and monkeys.
Thanks to the Institute for In Vitro Sciences, Inc., scientists in China are moving closer to testing cosmetics in a test tube instead of on animals.
“When you house thousands of primates together that come from different parts of the world, they have a tendency of creating some really dangerous viruses and retroviruses.”