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  2. Testing cosmetics on animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Testing_cosmetics_on_animals

    Cosmetic testing on animals is a type of animal testing used to test the safety and hypoallergenic properties of cosmetic products for use by humans. Since this type of animal testing is often harmful to the animal subjects, it is opposed by animal rights activists and others.

  3. 10 Biggest Makeup Companies that Test on Animals - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/10-biggest-makeup-companies...

    Testing on animals has luckily seized to be trendy among cosmetic companies. The majority of the U.S. companies, and almost all […] 10 Biggest Makeup Companies that Test on Animals

  4. Canada has officially banned testing cosmetics on animals - AOL

    www.aol.com/canada-officially-banned-testing...

    Canada has moved to ban the testing of cosmetics on animals, joining a number of other countries and American states to outlaw the practice.

  5. Beauty Without Cruelty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beauty_Without_Cruelty

    BWC's products are free of parabens, gluten, S.L.S, PEG, toluene, formaldehyde and phthalates. Although millions of animals are killed each year as a result of animal testing of cosmetics, Beauty Without Cruelty advocates animal rights and argues that the results of animal testing are often unreliable and can not be applied to humans. [36]

  6. Fixed Cut-Off Date Animal Testing Policy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_Cut-Off_Date_Animal...

    The FCOD Animal Testing Policy is endorsed by the Naturewatch Foundation and Cruelty Free International’s Leaping Bunny certification. [2] Companies holding the Leaping Bunny cosmetics and personal care certification are encouraged to use a fixed cut-off date of 11 March 2013, the date on which a full European Union ban on animal testing for ...

  7. Draize test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draize_test

    The Draize test is an acute toxicity test devised in 1944 by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) toxicologists John H. Draize and Jacob M. Spines. Initially used for testing cosmetics, the procedure involves applying 0.5 mL or 0.5 g of a test substance to the eye or skin of a restrained, conscious animal, and then leaving it for a set amount of time before rinsing it out and recording its effects.

  8. Cruelty Free International - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cruelty_Free_International

    The BUAV was also closely involved in the lobbying which led to the adoption in the European Union of the 7th Amendment to the Cosmetics Directive, which effectively banned both the testing of cosmetics products and their ingredients on animals and also the sale of products in the EU which have been animal-tested anywhere in the world.

  9. Cosmetics Directive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmetics_Directive

    The amendment also prohibited, since 11 March 2009, to market cosmetic products containing ingredients which have been tested on animals. [8] The amendment does not prohibit companies to use animal testing to fulfill regulatory requirements in other countries.

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