人类最好的朋友vs.人类最好的食物:对可识别的狗和猪受害者的看法

Sarah Gradidge, Annelie J Harvey, D. McDermott, Magdalena Zawisza
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摘要

目前的动物受害学和物种主义研究主要集中在以人类为中心的物种主义(偏爱人类而非动物的偏见),而忽视了宠物物种主义(偏爱宠物而非宠物的偏见)。此外,研究很少探讨动物受害者的可识别性是否会影响人们对它们的看法,就像可识别的(人类)受害者效应一样。利用物种主义和非人化理论,目前的实验通过比较160名成年参与者对绑架受害者狗和猪的看法,解决了文献中的这些空白。正如预测的那样,方差分析证实,人们对狗(与猪相比)更感同身受,也更愿意帮助狗。相反,人们对猪(相对于狗)表达了更多的受害者贬损。参与者对猪(与狗)受害者的犯罪行为也表现出更多的间接宽恕。然而,物种对受害者的指责没有影响,受害者的可识别性对动物的感知没有影响,并且物种与可识别性没有显著的相互作用。目前的实验独特地将我们以人类为基础的知识扩展到对狗和猪受害者的感知,并进一步证明了宠物物种歧视的存在。它还强调,可识别的(人类)受害者效应可能不适用于动物受害者,从而将动物受害者学区分为一个独特的调查领域。讨论了动物受害学和宠物物种主义文献的理论含义,以及对动物受害者政策和公众观念的实际含义。
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Humankind’s Best Friend vs. Humankind’s Best Food: Perceptions of Identifiable Dog vs. Pig Victims
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.
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