Recognition of Insects as Animals in EU Law: A Legal and Ethical Analysis

Authors

  • Angelos Tsikas Department of Forestry and Management of the Environment and Natural Resources, Democritus University of Thrace, Orestiada, Greece

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.71389/gjal.160789

Keywords:

EU Animal Welfare Law, Insect Sentience and Cognition, Legal Harmonization in the EU, Ethical Policy Reform, Precautionary Principle in Animal Law

Abstract

The legal recognition of animals in European Union (EU) legislation remains inconsistent, particularly regarding invertebrates. While vertebrates enjoy robust protections under EU law, insects and other invertebrates are systematically excluded from legal definitions of “animals”. This note focuses on Directive 2010/63/EU—the key EU legal instrument regulating the use of animals in scientific procedures—and highlights its exclusion of insects despite growing scientific evidence of insect sentience. Using a comparative analysis of national legal frameworks, ethical reasoning, and scientific findings, the note argues that the exclusion of insects from legal protection is both scientifically outdated and ethically inconsistent. Policy recommendations are provided to harmonize EU animal law and align it with contemporary ethical and biological understanding.

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Published

2025-05-15

How to Cite

Tsikas, A. (2025). Recognition of Insects as Animals in EU Law: A Legal and Ethical Analysis. The Global Journal of Animal Law, 13(1), 35–47. https://doi.org/10.71389/gjal.160789

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Section

Note