| Literature DB >> 30731000 |
Thomas Bøker Lund1, Sara Vincentzen Kondrup1, Peter Sandøe1,2.
Abstract
We present a questionnaire-based measure of four animal ethics orientations. The orientations, which were developed in light of existing empirical studies of attitudes to animal use and ethical theory, are: animal rights, anthropocentrism, lay utilitarianism, and animal protection. The two latter orientations can be viewed as variants of animal welfarism. Three studies were conducted in Denmark in order to identify the hypothesised orientations, evaluate their concurrent validity, and report their prevalence and relevance in animal-related opinion formation and behaviour. Explorative factor analysis (Study 1) and confirmative factor analysis (Study 2) successfully identified the four orientations. Study 2 revealed good measurement invariance, as there was none or very modest differential item functioning across age, gender, living area, and contrasting population segments. Evaluation of concurrent validity in Study 2 found that the orientations are associated with different kinds of behaviour and opinion when the human use of animals is involved in the hypothesised directions. In Study 3, a representative population study, the animal protection orientation proved to be most prevalent in the Danish population, and as in study 2 the four orientations were associated with different behaviours and opinions. Remarkably, the animal protection orientation does not lead to increased animal welfare-friendly meat consumption, the main reason for this being non-concern about the current welfare status of farm animals. We argue that the developed measure covers a wide range of diversity in animal ethics orientations that is likely to exist in a modern society such as Denmark and can be used in future studies to track changes in the orientations and to understand and test hypotheses about the sources and justifications of people's animal-related opinions and behaviours.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30731000 PMCID: PMC6366885 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0211656
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Factor structure of the multidimensional measure of animal ethics orientations—results from explorative factor analysis in Study 1 (N = 158).
| Animal rights | Anthropo-centric | Animal | Lay utilitarian | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The use of animals by humans should be prohibited by law. | 0.578 | |||
| In principle, the use of animals by humans is unacceptable because animals can feel pain, happiness, etc. | 1.025 | |||
| In principle, the use of animals by humans is unacceptable because animals are sentient beings. | 0.940 | |||
| We have the right to use animals because humans are intellectually superior to animals. | 0.716 | |||
| Human interests are more important than those of animals. | 0.921 | |||
| We must prioritize humans over animals. | 0.773 | |||
| It is acceptable for humans to put animals down if it is done painlessly. | 0.655 | |||
| Using animals for important human purposes (e.g. medical research) is acceptable if it is done so that the animals do not experience unnecessary stress. | 0.965 | |||
| Using animals for important human purposes is acceptable if it is done so that the animals do not experience unnecessary pain. | 0.945 | |||
| Using animals for important human purposes is acceptable if the animals have a decent quality of life. | 0.838 | |||
| Inflicting serious pain on animals is acceptable if it is necessary in order to achieve a vital human goal–e.g. in medical research. | 0.835 | |||
| Inflicting considerable pain on animals is justified if the purpose is sufficiently important—e.g. medical research. | 1.003 | |||
| Exposing animals to stress and reducing their welfare is justified if the purpose is sufficiently important. | 0.530 | |||
| Animal rights | 1.000 | |||
| Anthropocentric | -0.447 | 1.000 | ||
| Animal protection | -0.451 | 0.447 | 1.000 | |
| Lay utilitarian | -0.347 | 0.575 | 0.475 | 1.000 |
Fit indices from explorative factor analysis: CFI .990/TLI .976/RMSEA 0.042/SRMR 0.018/Chi2 41.0 (32df); p>0.05. Factor loadings are from geomin rotated solution. Values below 0.300 were suppressed.
Tests of association between the animal ethics dimensions and opinions about the human use of animals (N = 448).
| Animal rights | Anthropo-centric | Animal protection | Lay utili-tarian | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| On principle, I do not visit zoos, because animals are kept with the sole purpose of public exhibition | 0.024 | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. |
| It is completely fine to keep animals in zoos as long as they as they thrive in captivity | n.s. | 0.016 | 0.028 | n.s. |
| It is completely acceptable to show trained wild animals in circuses | n.s. | 0.027 | n.s. | n.s. |
| There is no reason to punish people who have sexual intercourse with animals as long as the animal is not exposed to pain or other discomforts | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | 0.023 |
| Dilemma about homeless cats: “Put down the homeless cats where a new home is not quickly found, so that important resources can be used elsewhere (reference: other responses to the dilemma”) | -0.011 | n.s. | n.s. | 0.012 |
| There should be no limits to the use of animals in medical research | n.s. | 0.022 | n.s. | 0.028 |
* p<0.05
** p<0.01
*** p<0.001; n.s: not significant at the 0.05 level
A Results are from ordinal logit regression models (1 =“disagree; 2 =“neither agree/disagree”; 3 = agree”) where the following control variables are included: subpopulation (divided into meat avoiders, ordinary Danes, and respondents employed in the meat production sector), age, gender, education, and living area (regions of Denmark).
B Introductory text to the dilemma: Many resources are used in taking care of homeless cats. It will be impossible or very difficult to find a new home for a large proportion of the cats. What do you think should be done? Other response options offered to respondents were: “I have no opinion about this”, “Let’s be more patient and only put down the cats if it is impossible to assure them proper welfare”, and “other”. They were recoded into the reference value = 0.
C Results are from logit regression models Control variables were similar to the ones reported in note A.
The animal ethics orientations scores in socio-demographic sectors (N = 1002–1005).
| Animal rights | Anthropocentric | Animal protection | Lay utilitarian | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M | SD | M | SD | M | SD | M | SD | |
| Gender | ||||||||
| Male | 39.7 | (25.5) | 51.7 | (23.0) | 72.0 | (22.5) | 43.6 | (25.3) |
| Female | 48.6 | (26.0) | 39.7 | (23.5) | 66.8 | (26.4) | 32.2 | (24.5) |
| Age | ||||||||
| 15–29 years | 50.5 | (26.5) | 43.4 | (24.7) | 63.4 | (27.0) | 38.3 | (25.8) |
| 30–39 years | 44.5 | (28.7) | 46.7 | (26.0) | 69.9 | (23.1) | 38.5 | (28.3) |
| 40–49 years | 39.3 | (25.2) | 48.3 | (22.9) | 72.8 | (20.6) | 42.6 | (25.6) |
| 50–59 years | 47.0 | (26.5) | 41.4 | (25.2) | 66.3 | (29.3) | 33.9 | (25.7) |
| 60–69 years | 40.5 | (23.5) | 47.3 | (21.1) | 74.1 | (21.8) | 35.3 | (23.4) |
| 70 years or older | 38.2 | (21.8) | 51.0 | (21.3) | 74.4 | (18.9) | 39.8 | (20.8) |
| n.s. | n.s. | |||||||
| Living area (regions) | ||||||||
| Capital region | 41.7 | (24.6) | 46.4 | (22.1) | 71.3 | (22.9) | 37.2 | (24.3) |
| Mid Jutland | 46.5 | (30.1) | 47.1 | (24.6) | 67.9 | (27.4) | 39.9 | (27.2) |
| North Jutland | 46.1 | (25.2) | 44.5 | (24.7) | 66.1 | (25.5) | 37.4 | (23.9) |
| Region Zealand | 43.6 | (25.8) | 47.8 | (25.4) | 73.8 | (21.0) | 39.8 | (26.7) |
| Southern Denmark | 45.6 | (26.9) | 39.9 | (23.4) | 62.7 | (28.9) | 35.4 | (26.7) |
| n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | ||||||
| Education | ||||||||
| Cumpulsory school | 50.9 | (26.7) | 40.4 | (24.4) | 56.9 | (31.1) | 32.5 | (24.9) |
| High school | 46.6 | (26.9) | 45.5 | (25.4) | 69.8 | (23.3) | 39.2 | (25.4) |
| Vocational education | 43.8 | (24.8) | 45.3 | (23.3) | 72.3 | (21.0) | 37.8 | (23.9) |
| Short to medium length higher education | 40.4 | (25.8) | 50.0 | (24.9) | 74.6 | (19.7) | 40.8 | (27.6) |
| Long higher education | 34.0 | (24.8) | 51.3 | (23.2) | 77.7 | (19.5) | 44.4 | (26.1) |
| Total | 44.1 | (26.1) | 45.8 | (24.0) | 69.4 | (24.6) | 38.0 | (25.5) |
* p<0.05
** p<0.01
*** p<0.001
n.s: not significant at the 0.05 level
Adjusted associations between animal ethics orientations and stated behaviour in areas where animals are used, having a cat or dog, and animal-related opinions and trust (N = 974–1002)–coefficients from multivariate models.
| Animal rights | Anthropo-centrism | Animal protection | Lay utili-tarian | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of animal theme parks visited | n.s. | -0.06 | 0.009 | n.s. |
| Frequency of meat eating | n.s. | n.s. | 0.006 | 0.004 |
| Animal welfare-friendly meat consumption | 0.016 | -0.11 | n.s. | -0.11 |
| Semi-vegetarianism | 0.015 | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. |
| Cat ownership | n.s. | n.s. | -0.09 | -0.09 |
| Dog ownership | n.s. | -0.14 | n.s. | n.s. |
| Trust in current animal welfare legislation | n.s. | 0.031 | 0.010 | 0.014 |
| Endorsing an NGO animal welfare campaign | 0.005 | -0.005 | 0.004 | -0.08 |
| Endorsing a campaign from the Danish meat and agricultural farmers’ association | n.s. | n.s. | 0.08 | n.s. |
| Non-concern about animal welfare | -0.003 | 0.016 | n.s. | 0.010 |
* p<0.05
** p<0.01
*** p<0.001; n.s: not significant at the 0.05 level
A Control variables in all analyses were: gender, age, household type (single adult, two adults (no children), and household with children), educational level, and living area.
B Reported coefficients are from a Poisson regression (suitable when the dependent variable is a count variable).
C Reported coefficients are from ols regression.
D Reported coefficients are from an ordinal logit regression.
E Reported coefficients are from a logit regression.
Unadjusted correlation coefficients between animal ethics orientations and stated behaviour in areas where animals are used, having a cat or dog, and animal-related opinions and trust (N = 974–1002).
| Animal rights | Anthropo-centrism | Animal protection | Lay utili-tarian | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of animal theme parks visited | -0.0321n.s. | -0.0354n.s. | 0.0791 | -0.0237n.s. |
| Frequency of meat eating | -0.0819n.s. | 0.1986 | 0.1752 | 0.2083 |
| Animal welfare-friendly meat consumption | 0.2706 | -0.265 | -0.2216 | -0.2815 |
| Semi-vegetarianism | 0.1547 | -0.0991 | -0.1468 | -0.0842 |
| Cat ownership | 0.0918 | -0.1082 | -0.1214 | -0.1101 |
| Dog ownership | 0.1046 | -0.1195 | -0.0611n.s. | -0.1056 |
| Trust in current animal welfare legislation | -0.2435 | 0.4707 | 0.3009 | 0.4064 |
| Endorsing an NGO animal welfare campaign | 0.2388 | -0.2795 | -0.1632 | -0.2934 |
| Endorsing a campaign from the Danish meat and agricultural farmers’ association | -0.0147 n.s. | 0.0222 n.s. | 0.1235 | 0.0286 n.s. |
| Non-concern about animal welfare | -0.3122 | 0.6013 | 0.3367 | 0.5625 |
* p<0.05
** p<0.01
*** p<0.001; n.s: not significant at the 0.05 level
A Pearson’s r coefficients. P-values are from a Poisson regression.
B Pearson’s r coefficients and p-values.
C Spearman’s rho coefficient and p-values.
Decomposition of the extent to which five variables (Animal rights, Anthropocentrism, Lay utilitarian, Non-concern, and Trust in current animal welfare legislation) mediate the effect of the Animal protection orientation on Animal welfare-friendly meat consumption (N = 976),.
| Confounding (%) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Animal protection (variable of interest that is decomposed) | ||
| Reduced (unadjusted model) | -0.0264 | |
| Full model (adjusted model) | -0.004n.s. | |
| Difference (summary of confounding) | -0.022 | 83.5 |
| Components of difference | ||
| Animal rights | -0.0073 | 27.92 |
| Anthropocentrism | 0.0016 | -5.98 |
| Lay utilitarian | -0.0018 | 6.73 |
| Non-concern about animal welfare | -0.0109 | 41.32 |
| Trust in current animal welfare legislation | -0.0035 | 13.55 |
* p<0.05
** p<0.01
*** p<0.001; n.s: not significant at the 0.05 level
A Decomposition based on the khb method outlined by Breen, Karlson, & Holm, A. (2013) and implemented in Stata’s khb package.
B Control variables included (using the concomitant command in the khb package) were: gender, age, household type (single adult, two adults (no children), and household with children), educational level, and living area.