Donald Broom


Donald Maurice Broom is an English biologist and emeritus professor of animal welfare at the University of Cambridge.

Education and career

Broom studied at Whitgift School, and at St Catharine's College, Cambridge, where he gained a BA in 1964, and a PhD in 1967. From 1967 to 1986, he was lecturer and then reader at the University of Reading.
Broom was appointed to the first professorship in animal welfare at the University of Cambridge in 1986, and has written widely on sentience in animals, and on the ethics and morality of animal welfare.
During his career in Cambridge, Broom was a fellow of St Catharine's College, Cambridge, and a professor in the veterinary school. On retirement in 2009, he was elected to an emeritus fellowship at St Catharine's college.

Awards

2000: Honorary D.Sc: De Montfort University.2005: Honorary Doctorate: Norwegian University of Life Sciences.

Selected works

Biology of Behaviour Farm Animal Behaviour and Welfare, with Andrew F. Fraser Stress and Animal Welfare with Kenneth G. Johnson Evidence to the Burns InquiryThe Evolution of Morality and Religion Sentience and Animal Welfare.Domestic Animal Behaviour and Welfare, with Andrew F. Fraser, 5th edition.