Libmonster ID: IN-2190

Five Freedoms and Five Domains of Well-being: The Evolution of an Ethical Paradigm in Animal Science

Introduction: From Negative Definition to Positive Model

The concept of the "Five Freedoms," formulated in 1965 by the British Farm Animal Welfare Council's (Brambell Committee), has become a cornerstone of modern animal protection and animal welfare science. However, while revolutionary for its time, it had a reactive character, focusing on minimizing suffering. In the last two decades, the scientific community, recognizing the enduring value of the "Freedoms," has proposed a more progressive and holistic model — the "Five Domains." This evolution reflects the shift from simply preventing cruelty to actively ensuring the quality of life of the animal.

Concept of the "Five Freedoms": Historical Context and Content

Created in response to public concern about the conditions of farm animals, the concept formulated five fundamental principles that should be ensured by humans:

Freedom from hunger and thirst — through access to fresh water and a diet to maintain health and vitality.

Freedom from discomfort — through providing an appropriate environment, including shelter and a comfortable place to rest.

Freedom from pain, injury, and disease — through prevention, rapid diagnosis, and treatment.

Freedom of natural behavior — through providing sufficient space, conditions, and companionship of animals of the same species.

Freedom from fear and distress — through conditions and handling that exclude psychological suffering.

Strengths and limitations: The "Freedoms" provided a clear, understandable structure for legislation and inspections (e.g., in Welfare Quality® certification systems). However, they were criticized for:

Negative focus: Emphasis on "freedom FROM" rather than ensuring positive states.

Anthropocentricity: The definition of "natural behavior" may be controversial in domesticated conditions.

Stativity: The model does not always consider trade-offs between different freedoms (e.g., freedom from disease through vaccination may cause short-term stress).

The "Five Domains" Model: Scientifically Based Evolution

Developed in the 1990s, primarily by Professor David Mellor (New Zealand), the "Five Domains" model shifts the focus from external conditions to the internal subjective state of the animal. It considers well-being as a result of the impact of external factors on four physical-functional domains, which, in turn, form the fifth — mental state.

Domain 1: Nutrition. Focuses not just on the absence of hunger, but on positive experiences from searching, consuming, and digesting diverse, species-appropriate food. For example, for ruminants — the ability to chew coarse feed for a long time; for pigs — digging for food.

Domain 2: Environment. Emphasizes the ability to choose comfortable conditions (warm/cold, shelter/open space), the absence of negative impacts (moisture, drafts, overcrowding), and the presence of environmental enrichment (materials for investigation and manipulation).

Domain 3: Health. Covers not only treatment but also physical condition, energy, vitality. Includes the absence of diseases, injuries, but also good functional state of all body systems.

Domain 4: Behavior. The most complex domain. It is about the ability to express a wide repertoire of species-specific behavior: social interaction, play, investigative, parenting, etc. The key concept is control over the environment (agency), the ability to make choices.

Domain 5: Mental State. It is integrative and central. It is formed under the influence of the first four domains. The goal is to predominate positive mental states (happiness, comfort, interest, joy, a sense of security) over negative ones (fear, frustration, pain, boredom, helplessness).

Key difference: If "Freedoms" say: "The animal should not be hungry," then "Domains" assert: "We must create conditions in which the animal experiences pleasure from eating and the process of obtaining it."

Scientific Justification and Practical Application

Deeply rooted in neurophysiology and ethology, the "Five Domains" model recognizes that the animal brain (especially vertebrates) has neural substrates for generating subjective emotional states. Positive experiences (such as during social grooming or successful problem-solving) are associated with the activation of reward systems (dopaminergic, opioidic).

Practical application of the model:

In assessing well-being: Allows for a more nuanced assessment, identifying not only overt suffering but also a lack of positive experiences. For example, a cow standing in a clean stall and receiving balanced feed (satisfies "Freedoms") but lacking the opportunity for exercise and social contact will have low scores in the 4th and 5th domains.

In developing systems of confinement: Stimulates the creation of enriched environments. For layer hens — it is not just the refusal of cages, but the provision of roosts, dust baths, digging areas. For laboratory rodents — complex mazes, nesting material, social groups.

In zookeeping: It is the basis for the concept of "behavioral enrichment," where the task is not just to feed and preserve the animal but to create mental and physical challenges that stimulate natural behavior.

A vivid example — pig farming: According to "Freedoms," it is enough to provide feed, dry bedding, and a veterinarian. The "Five Domains" model requires also providing straw or similar material for manipulation and digging (Domain 4: Behavior), which satisfies a powerful species-specific need, reduces stress, stereotypies (chewing on nothing, biting conspecifics), and thus improves mental state (Domain 5). Studies show that this leads to a real increase in productivity and a decrease in mortality.

Integration of Models: A Modern Approach

Today, the most effective approach is the synergistic use of both models. "Freedoms" remain an excellent tool for legally establishing minimum standards and quickly diagnosing overt violations. "Domains" serve as a scientific compass for designing advanced systems of confinement, assessing the quality of life in shelters, zoos, working with companion animals, and for forming public consciousness.

Interesting fact: The "Five Domains" model has been successfully adapted for assessing the well-being of wild animals in captivity, where the concept of "natural behavior" (from "Freedoms") is particularly difficult, and the focus on mental state allows for evaluating how the environment allows the animal to realize its key behavioral motivations.

Challenges and the Future

The main challenge for the "Five Domains" model is the complexity of measuring subjective positive states. Science is only learning to objectively evaluate "happiness" or "interest" in animals. However, the development of methods of cognitive ethology (preference tests, cognitive bias), neuroimaging, and precise biometrics (analysis of heart rate variability, ultrasonic vocalizations) opens new opportunities.

Conclusion: From Preventing Suffering to Promoting Flourishing

The evolution from "Five Freedoms" to "Five Domains" marks a paradigm shift in human relations to other species. This is a transition from a paternalistic model, where we merely protect animals from the worst, to a model of responsible partnership, where we actively strive to ensure them the opportunity for a full, rich life filled with positive experiences. The new model recognizes that well-being is not just the absence of negativity, but the presence of positivity, and puts the emotional world of the animal at the center of our attention. In this sense, "Five Domains" is not the abolition, but a natural development and deepening of the humanitarian principles laid down by "Five Freedoms," taking the science and ethics of animals to a qualitatively new level of complexity and responsibility.
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Five freedoms or Five areas of well-being for animals // Delhi: India (ELIB.ORG.IN). Updated: 29.12.2025. URL: https://elib.org.in/m/articles/view/Five-freedoms-or-Five-areas-of-well-being-for-animals (date of access: 08.06.2026).

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