• Reviews of
The Great Ape Project: Jonathan Marks, Human Biology, December 1994. "A Trans-Specific Agenda",
Russell H. Tuttle (1994),
Science 264(5158): 602–603. "Keeping it in the family,"
Robert Wokler,
Times Literary Supplement, 17 September 1993, reprinted in James Koobatian,
The Thinking Reader, Wadsworth 2002. • "Isn't It Time to Give Chimps Their Due?" Letter by Calavieri to
New York Times, printed 10 February 1997; "Don't Slight Disabled for Animal Rights' Sake," rejoinder by two
Yale faculty members, printed 16 February 1997. The same two faculty members repeated their criticism in . • "Rattling the cage",
Salon, 4 February 2000. This review of a book by
Steven Wise on animal rights briefly mentions The Great Ape Project as a precursor. • "Animal Liberation at 30", Peter Singer,
New York Review of Books, May 15, 2003. An extensive review of four books, one of which is Cavalieri's
The Animal Question: Why Non-human Animals Deserve Human Rights. • "Maintenir l'homme à part sans soumettre son statut au diktat des savoirs,"
Le Monde, 27 June 2003. Includes a mention of Cavalieri's work. In French. • Review of
The Animal Question by Marco Calarco (2004),
International Studies in Philosophy 36(4): 109–110, calling Cavalieri "one of the premier international animal rights theorists writing today". • "Great apes deserve life, liberty and the prohibition of torture", Peter Singer,
The Guardian, 27 May 2006. This story by the other Great Ape Project founder describes the project in some detail as background to its pro-animal-rights message. Reprinted in the
Taipei Times China Daily, and
Daily Times [https://web.archive.org/web/20110606154448/http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006%5C05%5C22%5Cstory_22-5-2006_pg6_16. • "Spain to regard apes as ‘legal persons’." Article from
The Guardian, 9 June 2006, regarding a Spanish resolution "based on the work of the Great Ape Project, which was founded in 1993 by philosophers Peter Singer and Paola Cavalieri", with several paragraphs on their work. Reprinted in the
Taipei Times. • The
Encyclopædia Britannica article on
apes cites
The Great Ape Project as additional reading. ==References==