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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Farm Animals And Their Welfare In 2000, David Fraser, Joy Mench, Suzanne Millman
Farm Animals And Their Welfare In 2000, David Fraser, Joy Mench, Suzanne Millman
State of the Animals 2001
Farm animals have been a traditional concern of the modern animal protection movement. In the early 1800s, when the movement emerged as a significant sociopolitical force in the United Kingdom, its first priority was protection of farm animals, with particular emphasis on cattle and horses. Subsequently priorities changed, and throughout most of the 1900s, animal protectionism in Europe and the English-speaking world focused more strongly on the use of animals for scientific research and on the rescue of abandoned or ill-treated companion animals. Today, however, with vigorous public debate over animal agriculture and its effects, farm animals are re-emerging as …
Social Attitudes And Animals, Harold Herzog, Andrew N. Rowan, Daniel Kossow
Social Attitudes And Animals, Harold Herzog, Andrew N. Rowan, Daniel Kossow
State of the Animals 2001
This chapter is an overview of the attitudes of Americans toward the treatment and moral status of nonhuman animals. We discuss problems of attitude assessment, the social psychology of attitudes toward animals, and the complex relationship between attitudes and behavior. We also review changes in attitudes toward animals over the past fifty years and current public opinion regarding a variety of issues related to animal welfare.
Progress In Livestock Handling And Slaughter Techniques In The United States, 1970–2000, Temple Grandin
Progress In Livestock Handling And Slaughter Techniques In The United States, 1970–2000, Temple Grandin
State of the Animals 2001
Promoting better stockmanship is essential to improving animal welfare. Large meat-buying customers such as fast-food restaurants in the United States and supermarket chains in the United Kingdom can motivate great change by insisting that suppliers uphold better animal welfare standards. The greatest advances of the last thirty years have been the result of company audits. To maintain such progress, handling and stunning must be continually audited, measured, and managed. Handlers tend to revert to rough handling unless they are monitored and managed. An objective scoring system provides a standard that can be upheld. An overworked employee cannot do a good …
Overview: The State Of Animals In 2001, Paul G. Irwin
Overview: The State Of Animals In 2001, Paul G. Irwin
State of the Animals 2001
From the animals’ perspective, the past half-century has not been one of uninterrupted progress. Indeed, as some conditions have improved, others have remained frustratingly unchanged, and still others have undoubtedly deteriorated.
How then to assess progress and failure? In the absence of a universally accepted, consistently applied set of standards for data collection and analysis, any attempt to answer the question, What is the state of animals in 2001?, must be based on a series of snapshots, an accumulation of statistics from which we can draw conclusions.