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Public Attitudes Toward Animal Research: Some International Comparisons
Linda Pifer, Kinya Shimizu, and Ralph Pifer
A comparative analysis was made of the public's attitudes toward the use of
animals in scientific research in 15 different nations. The intensity of
opposition to animal research was found to vary from relatively low levels in
Japan and the United States to much higher levels in France, Belgium, and Great
Britain. More women than men were opposed to animal research in all 15 nations.
Scientific knowledge, or the lack of knowledge, was not found to have a
consistent relationship with attitudes toward animal research. Concern about the
environment was found to be related to opposition to animal research in some
western European nations, in particular West Germany. Cluster analysis was used
to group the nations into four patterns based on intensity of opposition, level
of opposition, gender differences in opposition, and the relationship between
attitudes toward animal research and both environmental concern and scientific
knowledge.
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Animal Rights and Human Social Issues
David A. Nibert
Using survey data from a sample of residents of Clark County, Ohio, the author
explores the relationship between support for animal rights and opinions on
eleven social issues pertaining to gun control, acceptance of violence, and
rights for minority groups. Findings show that support for animal rights is
significantly related to seven of the eleven variables, suggesting the existence
of an important link between one's disposition toward human and nonhuman
animals.
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Are Smelly Animals Happy Animals? Competing Definitions of Laboratory Animal
Cruelty and Public Policy
Julian McAllister Groves
Regulations surrounding laboratory animal care have tried to address aspects of
an image of laboratory animal cruelty publicized by animal rights activists.
This image of cruelty, however, is not consistent with the experiences of those
charged with the day-to-day care of laboratory animals. This article examines
the incongruities between the public image of cruelty to animals in laboratories
as promoted by animal rights activists, and the experiences of laboratory animal
care staff who apply and enforce laboratory animal care regulations. In doing
so, the article illuminates why regulations surrounding laboratory animal care
are difficult to comply with on the part of the policy enforcers, and are
continuously contested by both animal rights activists and animal research
personnel.
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The Caring Sleuth: Portrait of an Animal Rights Activist
Kenneth Shapiro
The present study of the psychology of animal rights activists utilizes a
qualitative analytic method based on two forms of data: a set of questionnaire
protocols completed by grassroots activists and of autobiographical accounts by
movement leaders. The resultant account keys on the following descriptives: (1)
an attitude of caring, (2) suffering as an habitual object of perception, and
(3) the aggressive and skillful uncovering and investigation of instances of
suffering. In a final section, the investigator discusses tensions and conflicts
arising from these three themes and various ways of attempting to resolve them.
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