Jones, O. (2000); '(Un)ethical geographies of human-non-human relations' in animal spaces, beastly places; C. Philo and C. Wilbert (eds.), NY: Routledge
'Human-non-human relations are inevitably embedded in the complex spatialities of the world. The myriad encounters which make up human-non-human relations shape and are shaped by theis spatiality in an incredibly rich (in ontological terms) series of 'spatial formations'... 'the irreducible ontology of 'non-representational theory' (Thrift 1999).
'The deeply complex pattern which is human-non-human relations [...] presents a 'starting-point' or 'ground' from where, or upon which it is extremely difficult to build or to impose abstracted, universalised prescriptive or descriptive accounts' (269)