Good evening. My opinion comes from a Latin American standpoint.
I know quite a few people who have a strong distaste for zoos, and I can't blame them. Have animal husbandy and exhibit quality improved over the last few decades? Maybe, but Brazilian zoos still have a long way ahead to become anything similar to First World parks.
How will I be able to defend the concept of captivity when even major zoos in my country keep large gregarious animals by themselves in awful exhibits? Unfortunately, these absurds are still commonplace in the Third World, hence why the anti-zoo sentiment is extremely strong in places like LatAm.
As for politics, people from all sides can be anti-zoo, but left-wingers take the most action against these kinds of places. Neoliberals, however, also help worsen the mess because they promote budget cuts, leaving state-owned zoos (most zoos in Brazil are owned by city prefectures) penniless.
I know quite a few people who have a strong distaste for zoos, and I can't blame them. Have animal husbandy and exhibit quality improved over the last few decades? Maybe, but Brazilian zoos still have a long way ahead to become anything similar to First World parks.
How will I be able to defend the concept of captivity when even major zoos in my country keep large gregarious animals by themselves in awful exhibits? Unfortunately, these absurds are still commonplace in the Third World, hence why the anti-zoo sentiment is extremely strong in places like LatAm.
As for politics, people from all sides can be anti-zoo, but left-wingers take the most action against these kinds of places. Neoliberals, however, also help worsen the mess because they promote budget cuts, leaving state-owned zoos (most zoos in Brazil are owned by city prefectures) penniless.