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An International Comparison of Female and Male Students' Attitudes to the Use of Animals

SIMPLE SUMMARY: We surveyed university students in 11 Eurasian countries for their attitudes to animals, using an internet-based questionnaire to which 1,902 female and 1,530 male student responded from 102 universities. Across countries female students had greater concern for animal welfare and rig...

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Autores principales: Phillips, Clive, Izmirli, Serdar, Aldavood, Javid, Alonso, Marta, Choe, Bi, Hanlon, Alison, Handziska, Anastasija, Illmann, Gudrun, Keeling, Linda, Kennedy, Mark, Lee, Gwi, Lund, Vonne, Mejdell, Cecilie, Pelagic, Veselinas, Rehn, Therese
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4552214/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26486211
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani1010007
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author Phillips, Clive
Izmirli, Serdar
Aldavood, Javid
Alonso, Marta
Choe, Bi
Hanlon, Alison
Handziska, Anastasija
Illmann, Gudrun
Keeling, Linda
Kennedy, Mark
Lee, Gwi
Lund, Vonne
Mejdell, Cecilie
Pelagic, Veselinas
Rehn, Therese
author_facet Phillips, Clive
Izmirli, Serdar
Aldavood, Javid
Alonso, Marta
Choe, Bi
Hanlon, Alison
Handziska, Anastasija
Illmann, Gudrun
Keeling, Linda
Kennedy, Mark
Lee, Gwi
Lund, Vonne
Mejdell, Cecilie
Pelagic, Veselinas
Rehn, Therese
author_sort Phillips, Clive
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: We surveyed university students in 11 Eurasian countries for their attitudes to animals, using an internet-based questionnaire to which 1,902 female and 1,530 male student responded from 102 universities. Across countries female students had greater concern for animal welfare and rights than males, but especially so in more gender empowered countries. One contributing factor appeared to be the greater association of females than males with pets, and a possible outcome was greater female avoidance of meat consumption, especially red meat. ABSTRACT: Previous research has demonstrated that in households where the male partner is more dominant, there is convergence in male and female attitudes towards animals, whereas if the female partner is empowered they exhibit greater empathy towards animals than the male partner. We tested this theory of ‘female empowered empathy’ internationally in a survey of female and male students' attitudes towards use of animals, conducted in 11 Eurasian countries: China, Czech Republic, Great Britain, Iran, Ireland, South Korea, Macedonia, Norway, Serbia, Spain and Sweden. Gender empowerment was estimated for each country using the Gender Empowerment Measure designed by the United Nations. The survey was administered via the internet in universities within countries, and 1,902 female and 1,530 male student responses from 102 universities were received. Respondents rated the acceptability of 43 major concerns about human use of animals, and the importance of 13 world social issues, including animal protection, environmental protection and sustainable development. Females had greater concern for animal welfare and rights than males. There was a positive correlation between the Gender Empowerment Measure and the ratio of female to male concern for animal welfare and rights, but not for other world issues. Thus in countries where females were more empowered, principally Sweden, Norway and Great Britain, females had much greater concern than males for animal issues, whereas in other countries the responses of males and females were more similar. Across countries female students were more likely to avoid meat and less likely to avoid eggs, milk and seafood than male students, and were more likely to have kept pets than males. Females rated cats as more sentient than males did. The results demonstrate that females have greater concern for animal welfare and rights than males, and that this is more likely to be expressed in countries where females are relatively empowered, suggesting that ‘emancipated female empathy’ operates across countries as well as at a local level.
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spelling pubmed-45522142015-09-30 An International Comparison of Female and Male Students' Attitudes to the Use of Animals Phillips, Clive Izmirli, Serdar Aldavood, Javid Alonso, Marta Choe, Bi Hanlon, Alison Handziska, Anastasija Illmann, Gudrun Keeling, Linda Kennedy, Mark Lee, Gwi Lund, Vonne Mejdell, Cecilie Pelagic, Veselinas Rehn, Therese Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: We surveyed university students in 11 Eurasian countries for their attitudes to animals, using an internet-based questionnaire to which 1,902 female and 1,530 male student responded from 102 universities. Across countries female students had greater concern for animal welfare and rights than males, but especially so in more gender empowered countries. One contributing factor appeared to be the greater association of females than males with pets, and a possible outcome was greater female avoidance of meat consumption, especially red meat. ABSTRACT: Previous research has demonstrated that in households where the male partner is more dominant, there is convergence in male and female attitudes towards animals, whereas if the female partner is empowered they exhibit greater empathy towards animals than the male partner. We tested this theory of ‘female empowered empathy’ internationally in a survey of female and male students' attitudes towards use of animals, conducted in 11 Eurasian countries: China, Czech Republic, Great Britain, Iran, Ireland, South Korea, Macedonia, Norway, Serbia, Spain and Sweden. Gender empowerment was estimated for each country using the Gender Empowerment Measure designed by the United Nations. The survey was administered via the internet in universities within countries, and 1,902 female and 1,530 male student responses from 102 universities were received. Respondents rated the acceptability of 43 major concerns about human use of animals, and the importance of 13 world social issues, including animal protection, environmental protection and sustainable development. Females had greater concern for animal welfare and rights than males. There was a positive correlation between the Gender Empowerment Measure and the ratio of female to male concern for animal welfare and rights, but not for other world issues. Thus in countries where females were more empowered, principally Sweden, Norway and Great Britain, females had much greater concern than males for animal issues, whereas in other countries the responses of males and females were more similar. Across countries female students were more likely to avoid meat and less likely to avoid eggs, milk and seafood than male students, and were more likely to have kept pets than males. Females rated cats as more sentient than males did. The results demonstrate that females have greater concern for animal welfare and rights than males, and that this is more likely to be expressed in countries where females are relatively empowered, suggesting that ‘emancipated female empathy’ operates across countries as well as at a local level. MDPI 2010-12-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4552214/ /pubmed/26486211 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani1010007 Text en © 2011 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Phillips, Clive
Izmirli, Serdar
Aldavood, Javid
Alonso, Marta
Choe, Bi
Hanlon, Alison
Handziska, Anastasija
Illmann, Gudrun
Keeling, Linda
Kennedy, Mark
Lee, Gwi
Lund, Vonne
Mejdell, Cecilie
Pelagic, Veselinas
Rehn, Therese
An International Comparison of Female and Male Students' Attitudes to the Use of Animals
title An International Comparison of Female and Male Students' Attitudes to the Use of Animals
title_full An International Comparison of Female and Male Students' Attitudes to the Use of Animals
title_fullStr An International Comparison of Female and Male Students' Attitudes to the Use of Animals
title_full_unstemmed An International Comparison of Female and Male Students' Attitudes to the Use of Animals
title_short An International Comparison of Female and Male Students' Attitudes to the Use of Animals
title_sort international comparison of female and male students' attitudes to the use of animals
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4552214/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26486211
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani1010007
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