Gay A. Bradshaw

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Gay A. Bradshaw, Ph.D., Ph.D., (born July 8, 1959) is an American psychologist and ecologist.[1] She is director of The Kerulos Center. Her work focuses on animal trauma recovery and wildlife self-determination.[2][3] Bradshaw’s studies were the first to identify Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in non-human animals beginning with free living elephants.[4][5][6] She is the author of a seminal series of articles on great ape psychology, trauma, civil rights, and consciousness.[3][7][8] This work was expanded to parrots, bears, and domestic animals and led to her founding the field of trans-species psychology, the articulation of a vertebrate common model of brain, mind, and behavior that is supported by existing science.[6]

Discovery of PTSD in elephants and chimpanzees

In 2005, while investigating what was referred to as an outbreak of “abnormal behaviors”, Bradshaw established that in fact African elephants were experiencing Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).[9] Psychological symptoms included inter- and intra-species aggression, abnormal startle response, depression, mood disorders, and socio-emotional dysfunction, including infant neglect. All were related to a series of human-caused trauma: mass killings, translocations, social disruption, and habitat loss and degradation.[10][11] Her findings were further supported by neuroscience research stating that the brain structures affected by trauma (cortical and subcortical areas of the right brain) are highly conserved across species.[12][13] The epidemic proportions of elephant PTSD signifies a critical point and portends imminent collapse of elephant societies in Asia and Africa.[1][9]

Trans-species psychology

According to Bradshaw, trans-species psychology labels the entirety of standing science that describes a unitary model of brain, mind, and behavior for all animals.[14] Bradshaw maintains that establishing trans-species psychology as a new field was only necessary to point out the selective use of science. A vast accumulation of theory and data accumulated since Charles Darwin shows that nonhuman animals are mentally and emotionally comparable to humans, and surpass human abilities in diverse ways.[15][16][17] However, this understanding is neither explicitly acknowledged, nor do scientific practices reflect such. By ignoring human and other animal psychological comparability, the science community encourages cultural and legal subjugation of animals.[2]

Trans-species psychology rectifies this inconsistency by eliminating the artificial separation between species and openly bringing knowledge of human psychology to bear on other species.[2][18] “The trans affixed to psychology re-embeds humans within the larger matrix of the animal kingdom by erasing the ‘and’ between humans and animals that has been used to demarcate and reinforce the false notion that humans are substantively different cognitively and emotionally from other species,” (Bradshaw, Animal Visions, September 17, 2010).[19] In so doing, trans-species psychology revolutionizes a new scientific and ethical paradigm that has profound implications for human-animal relationships, culture, ethics, scientific research, and psychological practice.[9]

Trans-species psychology provides a scientific basis for the animal rights movement. There is irrefutable scientific evidence compelling ethical arguments to provide nonhuman animals with rights comparable to humans. Bradshaw refers to this cultural movement as trans-species living, "learning to live like animals again”.[20] Trans-species living embraces an ethic of being in service to animals in ways that promote animal self-determination and restores animal wellbeing by supporting their habitats, cultures, individual value, and agency. It disavows the exploitation of animals for profit, entertainment, research, or other gain.[6]

The Kerulos Center

In 2008, Bradshaw founded The Kerulos Center, in Jacksonville, Oregon, USA, a non-profit organization dedicated to ethical living with non-human nature.[6] The Kerulos Center consists of an international community of faculty members and professional advisors from diverse disciplines working to improve the lives of animals through scientific understanding and service. Its mission is to create community and practices that foster animal self-determination and wellbeing. A key principle at the Kerulos Center is that knowledge is only valuable when translated into action.[6][16]

Publications

Bradshaw authored the book, Elephants on the Edge: What Animals Teach Us about Humanity, (Yale University Press, 2009), which discusses the emotional and social lives of elephants.[1] Elephants on the Edge has been distinguished as a 2009 Book of the Year (BOTYA) Gold Medal Award, Winner in Psychology, a Scientific American Favorite Science Books of 2009, a nomination for Pulitzer Prize 2009, an Honorable Mention Award 2009 PROSE, a Psychology (Professional and Scholarly Publishing Division of the Association of American Publishers), and an Honorable Mention, 2010 Green Book Festival.[1]

Archbishop Desmond M.Tutu, 1984 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate: "African peoples and wildlife have been bound together in a delicate network of interdependence since ancient times. The arrival of colonialism tore apart these bonds: human brother now fights against elephant brother, and mothers of both species mourn. Elephants on the Edge is an urgent call to end this strife and for humanity to embrace once more the traditions that kept the peace with our animal kin."[1]

Bradshaw is also editor of Minding the Animal Psyche, an anthology covering diverse species from the perspective of trans-species psychology.[6][21]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Bradshaw, G.A. (2009). Elephants on the edge: What animals teach us about humanity. New Haven: Yale University Press. http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300167832
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Marino, L. (2010). A trans-species perspective on nature. http://onthehuman.org/2010/11/trans-species-perspective/
  3. 3.0 3.1 Bradshaw, G.A. et al. (2009). Developmental context effects on bicultural Post-Trauma self repair in Chimpanzees. Developmental Psychology, 45, 1376-1388.
  4. Siebert, C. (2006). An elephant crack-up. The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/08/magazine/08elephant.html?scp=1&sq=an%20elephant%20crackup&st=cse
  5. Launier, K.. ABC 20/20 They’re Like US-Say Elephant Researchers: From Kenya to Tennessee Elephants With PTSD are finding some peace. http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=5435466&page=1
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 Kerulos Center Website http://www.kerulos.org/
  7. Bradshaw, G.A. et al. (2008). Building an inner sanctuary: trauma-induced symptoms in nonhuman great apes. Journal of Trauma and Dissociation. 9(1); p. 9-34.
  8. Bradshaw. G.A. (2010). We, Matata: Bicultural living amongst apes, Spring, 83, 161-183.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Bradshaw, G.A. (2005). Elephant trauma and recovery: from human violence to trans-species psychology. dissertation: Pacifica Graduate Institute, Santa Barbara, California.
  10. Slotow, R. et al. (2000). Nature, 408, 425–426.
  11. Slotow, R., Balfour, D. & Howison, O. (2001) Killing of black and white rhinoceroses by African elephants in Hluhluhe-Umfolozi, South Africa. Pachyderm, 31, 14-20.
  12. Schore, A. N. (2002). Dysregulation of the right brain: a fundamental mechanism of traumatic attachment and the psychopathogenesis of posttraumatic stress disorder. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 36, 9-30.
  13. Schore, A.N. (2003). Affect dysregulation and disorders of the self. Mahwah, N.J.: Erhbaum.
  14. Northoff, G. and J. Panksepp, (2008).The trans-species concept of self and the subcortical-cortical midline system. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 12 (7), 259-264.
  15. Cantor, C. (2009). Post-traumatic stress disorder: evolutionary perspectives. Australian & New Zealand Journal Of Psychiatry, 43(11), 1038-1048. doi:10.3109/00048670903270407
  16. 16.0 16.1 Bradshaw, G.A. (2009). Transformation through service: trans-species psychology and its implications for ecotherapy. Ecotherapy. (eds.) L. Buzzell and C. Chalquist. Sierra Club, 157-165.
  17. Panksepp, J. (1998). Affective neuroscience: The foundations of human and animal emotions. New York: Oxford University Press.
  18. Bradshaw, G.A. & M. Watkins. (2006). Trans-species psychology; theory and praxis. Spring. V. 75, p. 69-94.
  19. http://animalvisions.wordpress.com/2010/09/17/trans-species-living-an-interview-with-gay-bradshaw/
  20. http://interactivefutures.ca/category/presenters/gay-bradshaw-elizabeth-oriel-the-kerulos-center/
  21. Bradshaw, G.A. (2010). Minding the Animal Psyche (Editor). Spring Journal, 83