"I Don't Like Meat to Look Like Animals": How Consumer Behavior Responds to Animal Rights Campaigns
Submitted on Jul 23, 2008 (Original item from 2008)
Advocacy Strategies | Farmed Animals | General Animal Protection | Vegetarianism and Veganism | Animal Advocacy | Food/Product Selection or Purchase Criteria | Meat, Dairy, Egg Consumption | Vegetarian Social, Psychological and Moral Development | Vegetarian Motivations or Barriers
by
Consumers are largely isolated from the moral implications of their choices by numerous mechanisms that allow them to dissociate their use of animals from the suffering of animals. The literature review portion of this thesis examines the psychological and cultural constructs that present unique challenges to animal rights as a social movement. From that contextual backdrop, this thesis then evaluates consumer response to three major campaigns conducted by HSUS and PETA between 1980 and the present. The campaigns are vegetarianism and factory farming, the anti-fur movement, and the campaign against cosmetics testing on animals. While consumer response has been mixed, there are other outcomes from those campaigns that signal broader cultural changes. [Excepted from report]
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