A multidimensional measure of animal ethics orientation: Developed and applied to a representative sample of the Danish public

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Standard

A multidimensional measure of animal ethics orientation : Developed and applied to a representative sample of the Danish public. / Lund, Thomas Bøker; Kondrup, Sara Vincentzen; Sandøe, Peter.

I: PLOS ONE, Bind 14, Nr. 2, e0211656, 2019.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lund, TB, Kondrup, SV & Sandøe, P 2019, 'A multidimensional measure of animal ethics orientation: Developed and applied to a representative sample of the Danish public', PLOS ONE, bind 14, nr. 2, e0211656. https://doi.org/10.1371/ journal.pone.0211656

APA

Lund, T. B., Kondrup, S. V., & Sandøe, P. (2019). A multidimensional measure of animal ethics orientation: Developed and applied to a representative sample of the Danish public. PLOS ONE, 14(2), [e0211656]. https://doi.org/10.1371/ journal.pone.0211656

Vancouver

Lund TB, Kondrup SV, Sandøe P. A multidimensional measure of animal ethics orientation: Developed and applied to a representative sample of the Danish public. PLOS ONE. 2019;14(2). e0211656. https://doi.org/10.1371/ journal.pone.0211656

Author

Lund, Thomas Bøker ; Kondrup, Sara Vincentzen ; Sandøe, Peter. / A multidimensional measure of animal ethics orientation : Developed and applied to a representative sample of the Danish public. I: PLOS ONE. 2019 ; Bind 14, Nr. 2.

Bibtex

@article{fca846a7f54b42549e5668136599463a,
title = "A multidimensional measure of animal ethics orientation: Developed and applied to a representative sample of the Danish public",
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 thesources and justifications of people{\textquoteright}s animal-related opinions and behaviours.",
author = "Lund, {Thomas B{\o}ker} and Kondrup, {Sara Vincentzen} and Peter Sand{\o}e",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1371/ journal.pone.0211656",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A multidimensional measure of animal ethics orientation

T2 - Developed and applied to a representative sample of the Danish public

AU - Lund, Thomas Bøker

AU - Kondrup, Sara Vincentzen

AU - Sandøe, Peter

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - 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 thesources and justifications of people’s animal-related opinions and behaviours.

AB - 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 thesources and justifications of people’s animal-related opinions and behaviours.

U2 - 10.1371/ journal.pone.0211656

DO - 10.1371/ journal.pone.0211656

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 2

M1 - e0211656

ER -

ID: 213043679