Canine Standards Atlas

The Atlas/Welfare Frameworks & Law/Terrestrial Animal Health Code

StandardInternational

Terrestrial Animal Health Code

Terrestrial Code · World Organisation for Animal Health

The intergovernmental reference standard for animal health and welfare, and the closest thing there is to a global baseline for how dogs are treated.

01 What It Is

The Terrestrial Animal Health Code is the international reference standard for the health and welfare of land animals, maintained by the World Organisation for Animal Health, the intergovernmental body once known as the OIE. It is not law in itself. It is a set of standards that member countries agree on and are expected to write into their own national rules, which makes it the nearest thing there is to a shared global baseline for the treatment of animals, dogs included.

02 What It Covers

Across its chapters the Code addresses animal health, animal welfare and veterinary public health, alongside the conditions for safe international trade. For dogs its central provision is the chapter on dog population management, recently broadened from a narrower focus on stray-dog control to cover all dogs, owned and unowned alike. That chapter sets out humane methods of managing dog populations and ties directly to rabies control, where vaccinating dogs and managing their numbers are the recognised route to eliminating the disease.

03 How It Is Checked

The Code is agreed through WOAH’s own standard-setting process and kept under revision by its specialist commissions, then implemented by each member country’s veterinary authority rather than by any single global inspector. How fully a country applies it varies, and WOAH works with regions on roadmaps toward compliance, but the standard carries the authority of having been agreed between governments rather than written by any one of them.

04 Why It Matters

Most countries do not write their animal-welfare rules from scratch. They lean on the Code, so its provisions shape national law on everything from disease control to the humane management of street dogs across much of the world. For a dog it is the quiet baseline beneath the local rules, the reason a humane approach to population control and rabies is the international expectation rather than a local preference.

Primary sources