Moral convictions and meat consumption: a comparative study of the animal ethics orientations of consumers of pork in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Moral convictions and meat consumption : a comparative study of the animal ethics orientations of consumers of pork in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden. / Lund, Thomas B.; Denver, Sigrid; Nordström, Jonas; Christensen, Tove; Sandøe, Peter.

In: Animals, Vol. 11, No. 2, 329, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lund, TB, Denver, S, Nordström, J, Christensen, T & Sandøe, P 2021, 'Moral convictions and meat consumption: a comparative study of the animal ethics orientations of consumers of pork in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden', Animals, vol. 11, no. 2, 329. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11020329

APA

Lund, T. B., Denver, S., Nordström, J., Christensen, T., & Sandøe, P. (2021). Moral convictions and meat consumption: a comparative study of the animal ethics orientations of consumers of pork in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden. Animals, 11(2), [329]. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11020329

Vancouver

Lund TB, Denver S, Nordström J, Christensen T, Sandøe P. Moral convictions and meat consumption: a comparative study of the animal ethics orientations of consumers of pork in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden. Animals. 2021;11(2). 329. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11020329

Author

Lund, Thomas B. ; Denver, Sigrid ; Nordström, Jonas ; Christensen, Tove ; Sandøe, Peter. / Moral convictions and meat consumption : a comparative study of the animal ethics orientations of consumers of pork in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden. In: Animals. 2021 ; Vol. 11, No. 2.

Bibtex

@article{9b3ba97eb25141b88445a8079d75a06f,
title = "Moral convictions and meat consumption: a comparative study of the animal ethics orientations of consumers of pork in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden",
abstract = "Background: The relationship between animal ethics orientations and consumer demand for meat with high standards of animal welfare, and the way this relationship plays out in different countries, is not well understood. Using pork as a case study, this comparative study aims to identify the animal ethics orientations that drive purchases of welfare meat in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden. Methods: Cross-sectional questionnaire data from representative samples of approximately 1600 consumers in each country were collected. A segmentation of pork consumers (using latent profile analysis) was carried out. Results: In all three countries, two subgroups were concerned about farm animal welfare: the first subgroup was driven by animal rights values; the second subgroup by animal protection values, where the main principle was that “it is all right to use animals as long as they are treated well”. Other consumer groups are less concerned about farm animal welfare and display little or no preference for welfare pork. Conclusions: In all three countries, dual demand for welfare pork exists. The findings of this study can be used, among others, to understand the marketability of enhanced welfare animal products and the potential for market-driven animal welfare improvements.",
keywords = "Animal ethics, Consumer segmentation, Cross-cultural comparison, Market-driven animal welfare improvements, Meat consumption, Welfare-enhanced meat",
author = "Lund, {Thomas B.} and Sigrid Denver and Jonas Nordstr{\"o}m and Tove Christensen and Peter Sand{\o}e",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.3390/ani11020329",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "Animals",
issn = "2076-2615",
publisher = "MDPI",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Moral convictions and meat consumption

T2 - a comparative study of the animal ethics orientations of consumers of pork in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden

AU - Lund, Thomas B.

AU - Denver, Sigrid

AU - Nordström, Jonas

AU - Christensen, Tove

AU - Sandøe, Peter

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Background: The relationship between animal ethics orientations and consumer demand for meat with high standards of animal welfare, and the way this relationship plays out in different countries, is not well understood. Using pork as a case study, this comparative study aims to identify the animal ethics orientations that drive purchases of welfare meat in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden. Methods: Cross-sectional questionnaire data from representative samples of approximately 1600 consumers in each country were collected. A segmentation of pork consumers (using latent profile analysis) was carried out. Results: In all three countries, two subgroups were concerned about farm animal welfare: the first subgroup was driven by animal rights values; the second subgroup by animal protection values, where the main principle was that “it is all right to use animals as long as they are treated well”. Other consumer groups are less concerned about farm animal welfare and display little or no preference for welfare pork. Conclusions: In all three countries, dual demand for welfare pork exists. The findings of this study can be used, among others, to understand the marketability of enhanced welfare animal products and the potential for market-driven animal welfare improvements.

AB - Background: The relationship between animal ethics orientations and consumer demand for meat with high standards of animal welfare, and the way this relationship plays out in different countries, is not well understood. Using pork as a case study, this comparative study aims to identify the animal ethics orientations that drive purchases of welfare meat in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden. Methods: Cross-sectional questionnaire data from representative samples of approximately 1600 consumers in each country were collected. A segmentation of pork consumers (using latent profile analysis) was carried out. Results: In all three countries, two subgroups were concerned about farm animal welfare: the first subgroup was driven by animal rights values; the second subgroup by animal protection values, where the main principle was that “it is all right to use animals as long as they are treated well”. Other consumer groups are less concerned about farm animal welfare and display little or no preference for welfare pork. Conclusions: In all three countries, dual demand for welfare pork exists. The findings of this study can be used, among others, to understand the marketability of enhanced welfare animal products and the potential for market-driven animal welfare improvements.

KW - Animal ethics

KW - Consumer segmentation

KW - Cross-cultural comparison

KW - Market-driven animal welfare improvements

KW - Meat consumption

KW - Welfare-enhanced meat

U2 - 10.3390/ani11020329

DO - 10.3390/ani11020329

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 33525675

AN - SCOPUS:85099812739

VL - 11

JO - Animals

JF - Animals

SN - 2076-2615

IS - 2

M1 - 329

ER -

ID: 256176999