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Humankind’s best friend vs. humankind’s best food: Perceptions of identifiable dog vs. pig victims

Title: Humankind’s best friend vs. humankind’s best food: Perceptions of identifiable dog vs. pig victims
Authors: Sarah Gradidge; Annelie J. Harvey; Daragh T. McDermott; Magdalena Zawisza
Publication Year: 2022
Collection: Anglia Ruskin University: Figshare
Subject Terms: pet speciesism; anthropocentric speciesism; dog; pig; identifiable victim effect
Description: Current animal victimology and speciesism research has predominantly focussed on anthropocentric speciesism (prejudice favouring humans over animals) and neglects pet speciesism (prejudice favouring pets over non-pets). Moreover, research rarely explores whether identifiability of animal victims affects perceptions of them in line with the identifiable (human) victim effect. Drawing on speciesism and dehumanization theories, the current experiment addressed these gaps in the literature by comparing 160 adult participants’ perceptions of a dog vs. pig victim of kidnapping. As predicted, a MANOVA confirmed that people feel more empathy for, and are more willing to help, dogs (vs. pigs). Conversely, people expressed greater victim derogation towards pigs (vs. dogs). Participants also displayed more second-hand forgiveness for perpetrators of crime against pig (vs. dog) victims. However, species had no effect on victim blaming and identifiability of the animal victim had no effect on perceptions of the animal, and there were no significant species x identifiability interactions. The current experiment uniquely extends our human-based knowledge to perceptions of dog vs. pig victims and further evidences the existence of pet speciesism. It also highlights that the identifiable (human) victim effect may not apply to animal victims, thus distinguishing animal victimology as a distinct area of investigation. Theoretical implications for animal victimology and pet speciesism literature, and practical implications for policy and public perceptions of animal victims, are discussed.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: unknown
Relation: 10779/aru.23781246.v1; https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Humankind_s_best_friend_vs_humankind_s_best_food_Perceptions_of_identifiable_dog_vs_pig_victims/23781246
Availability: https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Humankind_s_best_friend_vs_humankind_s_best_food_Perceptions_of_identifiable_dog_vs_pig_victims/23781246
Rights: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Accession Number: edsbas.19A348BA
Database: BASE