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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Organisation and activities  



2.1  Shelter  





2.2  Mobile clinic and ambulances  





2.3  Inspectorate  







3 References  





4 External links  














DSPCA







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This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this articlebyadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "DSPCA" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR
(August 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Dublin Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals

Abbreviation

DSPCA or Dublin SPCA

Formation

1840

Registration no.

CHY 1047[1]

Legal status

Registered charity

Purpose

Humane care for animals

Headquarters

Dublin, Ireland

Region served

Dublin

Website

www.dspca.ie

The Dublin Society for Prevention of Cruelty to AnimalsorDSPCA is a registered charity, established in 1840 to prevent cruelty to animals in Dublin in Ireland.

History

[edit]

The Dublin Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals was established in 1840,[2] and is the oldest and largest animal welfare charity in Ireland.[3]

Initially the organisation was known as the "Dublin Auxiliary of the Royal Society for the Protection of Animals", and it was founded the year the RSPCA received Royal Patronage.[4] The charity has had a number of names, and was known at different times as the "Dublin Home for Starving and Forsaken Cats" or the "Cats and Dogs Home".[4]

Between 1840 and 1990, the DSPCA was based at Grand Canal Quay in Dublin city centre. In 1990, it moved to Stocking Lane in the Dublin suburb of Rathfarnham. The land had been bequeathed to the charity in 1936 as a place to graze retired working horses.[5] In 2003, the charity moved to a new premises on Mount Venus Road in Rathfarnham. In 2010, the DSPCA constructed a new pet boarding centre, and in 2011 a new veterinary clinic was opened.[4]

The DSPCA continues to care for sick, injured and cruelly treated animals in the city and county of Dublin. It describes itself as the "only animal welfare charity in the city that cares for all animals, domestic and wild".[4]

Organisation and activities

[edit]

The DSPCA (sometimes known as the Dublin SPCA) is involved in investigating suspected cruelty, providing animal ambulance services, caring for animals at its shelter in Rathfarnham, finding new homes for animals, providing information on animal care, providing veterinary care, giving career guidance for those interested in working with animals, and working on legislative changes to improve protection for animals.[citation needed]

The Dublin Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (DSPCA, Irish charity number 1047) is operated and funded separately from the Irish Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ISPCA, Irish charity number 5619).[6][1][7]

Shelter

[edit]

The Dublin SPCA shelter is on Mount Venus Road, Rathfarnham. Opened in 2003, the facility offers shelter and care to a wide variety of pets and domesticated animals. The centre is also used to house a number of injured and young wildlife awaiting release including swans, foxes, badgers and small birds.[citation needed]

Mobile clinic and ambulances

[edit]

The Dublin SPCA operates four mobile clinics which offer subsidised veterinary treatment for pets whose owners are in receipt of welfare benefit.[citation needed]

The charity also operates four ambulances which cover the Dublin area, responding to emergency calls from the public. Ambulance crews collect sick and injured animals, deal with road traffic accidents, trapped or sick animals, and animals that need to be removed from a situation of cruelty.[citation needed]

Inspectorate

[edit]

DSPCA's inspectors investigate complaints of cruelty and neglect, provide guidance to animal owners where necessary, and initiates prosecution for offences.[citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Charity Detail - Charity number 1047 (DSPCA)". charitiesregulator.ie. Charities Regulator. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  • ^ "Creature comfort". The Irish Times. 16 July 2005. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  • ^ "Things you should consider before getting a dog". rte.ie. RTÉ. 1 July 2020. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  • ^ a b c d "History of the DSPCA". dspca.ie. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  • ^ "Irish Times Article Archive". The Irish Times. 21 September 1936.
  • ^ "Animal welfare charities get almost €2m in funding". Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. 20 December 2016. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  • ^ "Charity Detail - Charity number 5619 (ISPCA)". Charities Regulator. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  • [edit]

    Issues

  • Blood sports
  • Chick culling
  • Cormorant culling
  • Livestock dehorning
  • Eating live animals
  • Eating live seafood
  • Intensive animal farming
  • Intensive pig farming
  • Overview of discretionary invasive procedures on animals
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  • Feedback (pork industry)
  • Foam depopulation
  • Ventilation shutdown
  • Barn fire
  • Concepts

  • Animal psychopathology
  • Animal shelter
  • Animal welfare science
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  • Ethics of uncertain sentience
  • Ethical omnivorism
  • Five freedoms
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  • Intrinsic value in animal ethics
  • Rescue group
  • Three Rs principles
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  • Pain in
    nonhuman animals

  • Pain in amphibians
  • Pain in cephalopods
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  • Grimace scale
  • Organisations

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  • American Humane
  • Animal Aid Unlimited
  • Animal Welfare Board of India
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  • Badger Trust
  • Band of Mercy
  • Battersea
  • Blue Cross
  • Blue Cross of India
  • Cats Protection
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  • Cinnamon Trust
  • Dogs Trust
  • DSPCA
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  • HSUS
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    Contemporary

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  • Judy MacArthur Clark
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  • Alanna Devine
  • Robin Ganzert
  • Celia Hammond
  • Alison Hanlon
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  • Emily Patterson-Kane
  • Philip Lymbery
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  • Peter Gurney
  • Velma Bronn Johnston
  • Catherine Victoria Hall
  • Rachel Hirschfeld
  • Sjoerd Hofstra
  • Albert Knapp
  • Titus Lander
  • Carla Lane
  • Etta Lemon
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  • Terry Maple
  • Richard Martin
  • Shirley McGreal
  • Lady Mount Temple
  • Harriet Nevins
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  • Eliza Phillips
  • Maude Gillette Phillips
  • Samuel Jackson Pratt
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  • Scholars
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    Contemporary

  • Jonathan Balcombe
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  • Historical

  • Patrick Bateson
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  • Horse Protection Act of 1970 (US)
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  • List of international animal welfare conventions
  • Philippine Animal Welfare Act 1998 (Philippines)
  • Related


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=DSPCA&oldid=1195343962"

    Categories: 
    Animal charities
    Animal welfare organisations based in the Republic of Ireland
    Charities based in Ireland
    Organisations based in Dublin (city)
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