16-year-old Mane from the Armenian Newsroom argues that traditional zoos must be replaced by animal sanctuaries

‘For most animals, psychological confinement is far more damaging than the physical kind.’
12 June 2026
We need to stop keeping animals in concrete boxes
Nowadays, we have a weird way of ‘connecting’ with nature. We buy a ticket, walk through a gate and see an animal walking back and forth in a tiny, uncomfortable cage. With 2030’s conservation deadlines looming, we need to stop asking if we can keep animals in cages and start asking why we still do.
While zoos are designed for public viewing and species breeding, true sanctuaries are built entirely for the animal, taking in sick and injured animals and providing a permanent home to those that cannot be released back into the wild. Some sanctuaries are open to the public. Some also allow breeding, but the norm is to not allow this to happen.
It’s a mistake to think a lack of bars equals happiness. Designing an open enclosure to look pretty for tourists does nothing to heal the psychological trauma of an animal that is still being exploited for entertainment. For most animals, psychological confinement is far more damaging than the physical kind.
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Scientists call this zoochosis. It’s a type of mental suffering caused by the stress of being locked up and the lack of mental stimulation. It’s not just boredom, it’s much deeper.
In almost any zoo, you can see the signs: polar bears swinging their heads over and over, birds pulling out their own feathers, or monkeys biting themselves just because they are so stressed. These animals are built to travel for miles, hunt and live in big groups, not to sit in cages and entertain people.
Granted, there are some good points to the system. Some zoos have saved animals from disappearing forever.


