Citizens’ and Farmers’ Framing of ‘Positive Animal Welfare’ and the Implications for Framing Positive Welfare in Communication
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Method
Unlike most interview-based methods, which assume that participants can ‘tell it like it is’, it posits that interviewees are unlikely to understand the question in the same way as the researcher [25]. As such, a critical aspect of interview design was ensuring participants had space to recount their understanding of the target phenomenon, free from any a priori research assumptions affecting data collection (e.g., by asking narrow or closed questions). Although there is no singular way to conduct narrative interviews, the generally recommended approach is to first pose a primary narrative inducing question, where the researcher listens passively (e.g., does not offer any prompts) whilst actively taking notes on key points generated by the participant [26]. Once it is clear the participant has completed the recounting of this main narrative, the researcher may then use these notes to ask further questions and probe particular points [26]. In this regard, a particular strength of this interview method is that participants are not restricted to the researcher’s agenda or the questions the researcher asks. Rather, it encourages participants to tell their story and to take ownership of how that story is told [25].“Which assumes that unconscious connections will be revealed through the link that people make if they are free to structure their own narratives”.[25]
2.2. Sample
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Findings
3.1. Participants’ Sense-Making of Positive Animal Welfare
Similarly, farmers often reflected that the interview had been:“When you said positive animal welfare, I thought that’s a strange term; I’ve never heard that before”.(Citizen 2)
“The first time I’ve ever heard that term used”.(Dairy 6)
“So the welfare should be not to exploit them, not to obviously harm the animals”.(Citizen 4)
“Have a good quality of life, for me, that means sort of as natural a life as possible, you know, young not being taken away from parents, having access to the outdoors and the fresh air and all that sort of thing, and not being fed anything artificial”.(Citizen 6)
“I think it is the animal’s experiences, positive experiences rather than like negative”.(Citizen 7)
“Just a nice kind of hill for them, like fenced around, so nothing can get to them that is going to hurt them, a few sheep in there; not crowded at all”.(Citizen 9)
As highlighted by the comments in bold (emphasis added), when de-constructing ‘positive animal welfare’, citizens made sense of it by juxtaposing positive aspects (e.g., ‘a natural life’) with negative aspects (e.g., no harm). In this way, many citizens deduced that positive welfare was something which did not involve such negatives. Indeed, for some citizens, this comparative association between a ‘positive’ and a ‘negative’ of welfare was explicit:“It’s the exact sort of opposite of that imagery; I’ve got the horror image in my head right now and then the other image is the exact opposite”.(Citizen 3)
“Positive animal welfare? Well, what would be negative animal welfare? That would be the question”.(Citizen 2)
“Positive means to add. So therefore, you are adding above the baseline”.(Dairy 10)
However, in most cases, farmers drew from their personal constructs of animal welfare to make sense of ‘positive animal welfare’ as a whole. In other words, unlike the prior examples which deduced positive welfare by first thinking what ‘positive’ means per se, the majority of farmers’ sense-making centred on the deduction of ‘what are the positive aspects or outputs of my current animal welfare practices?’ For some farmers, although not quite as overt as citizens’ juxtaposition of ‘positive’ versus ‘negative’, positive welfare was surmised to be a combination of preventing negatives and enabling positives:“I suppose positive: higher than you need to be, crossing a bar”.(Beef & Sheep 10)
Nevertheless, the majority of farmers focused on their ‘ideals’ of welfare to give meaning to positive welfare:“Positive welfare…. It’s trying to prevent anything bad from happening to them, you’re trying to maintain comfort, you’re trying to maintain health and well-being”.(Dairy 6)
Interestingly, pig and poultry producers’ sense-making of positive welfare centred around the five freedoms:“Keeping them well-fed, bedded, watered and their health looked after…. So, they’re cared for and looked after to the best of our abilities; if they’re ill, or there’s a problem, that you look after them”.(Beef & Sheep 7)
“You know, if you want to be scientific about it you’ve got the five freedoms, which, yeah, I wouldn’t disagree with. You know, if you go through those five freedoms that is basically what you are trying to give the animal”.(Organic Free Range Egg 1)
“You’ve got something called the six freedoms I think it is. And it is to do with the freedom from fear, freedom from hunger, freedom from thirst, freedom from stress, freedom to exhibit natural behaviours and there is one more that I can’t think of. And that is basically it. As long as pigs have all of those, then to me that is good enough…. Humans would be the same, pigs are the same, sheep would be the same. As long as they can do all of those things, they should be relatively happy, I guess would be the term”.(Pig 1)
3.2. Citizens’ Framing of Positive Animal Welfare
3.2.1. Positive Experiences
which was further seen as a means to ensure animals had desired (ii) space:“Just that animals are being cared for in the best way for them, for me that conjures up ideas of the most natural…having access to the outdoors and fresh air and all that sort of thing”.(Citizen 6)
which was further inextricably linked as a way in which animals could be provided with opportunities to exert (iii) autonomy over their environment:“I think it is more animals with free space in large fields”;(Citizen 8)
“Just being outside in the fresh air and having the sun, I think these things are good for humans so I think that would extend to animals as well. Freedom to roam, trying to have as normal a life as possible, what a cow would do day to day, allowing them the space and freedom to do that”.(Citizen 2)
“Positive, a positive experience for an animal…. Maybe like in the case of pigs, a little mud bath or something like that, something that they can choose to do, they are not being forced to do it. They don’t need to do it to survive. They are not being forced to do it by a farmer”.(Citizen 9)
“The first thing that comes to mind is the happy farmer and happy animals….I think it’s the love between them and if they are showing love to the animals it is like both sides are happy…so I guess in a broader sense it is just a happier environment, more than just the animal. I feel like it is a happy environment on both ends, where animals are being looked after by people who care for the animals”.(Citizen 4)
“So I think positive animal welfare to me, is not just open fields and all that, which it is, that is usually the first image that comes to mind, but it is also one of these small little farms where they have a quality life, and it is a lot smaller and you know someone who knows every single one of the cows and has probably even named them, I don’t know. So, you know, there is a bond between the farmer say, with the animals, and the animals with the farmer, for sure. And there is love, that probably does [matter], it does you know”.(Citizen 1)
3.2.2. Free from Negative Experiences
“Treat them how you want to be treated….so the welfare should be not to exploit them, not to obviously harm animals.… So before it was obviously killed and what not, you did the best for it, you didn’t kind of treat it bad or negatively, you didn’t give it a bad life”(Citizen 5)
(ii) eliminating negative affect:“What I think it means is that animals are treated in the way they should be treated and not tortured in a farm let’s say. So the picture in my head is animal’s free out in nature or the other scenario would be the animals that are treated, they may be not in nature, but at least they are treated properly and they are not being tortured”;(Citizen 14)
and (iii) preventing health issues:“Because I think not letting them feel fear. I’m sure around the world some animals have been really abused. So like having that fear that they could have…. That is definitely not a positive experience”;(Citizen 7)
“I guess, to me, more kind of like their health, so they are not kept in a way that is going to make them ill or that is going to be detrimental to them”.(Citizen 11)
3.3. Farmer Framing of Positive Animal Welfare
“So I suppose the weigh scales will tell you how happy they are…because if they are happy they are putting on weight, which is what I am trying to do”.(Beef and sheep 6)
“And animal welfare and health and all those things around about is our priority. Because we want to create a, we want to create the best environment for our livestock. Because if they are happy, then they are going to produce more milk, be healthier and make our life a lot easier”.(Dairy 11)
“Well why I consider my hens have a good life is, well it’s very simply because we, whilst my hens work for me, everything that we do here is all about hen welfare, and about trying to get, and it’s a terrible thing to say, but you know I told you earlier, profitability and output from animals is very directly linked to their health and welfare”.(Free Range Egg 2)
3.3.1. Good Husbandry
which, as previously discussed, was closely tied with and considered a prerequisite to having (ii) happy animals:“Yes, performance. I suppose it goes back to measure, manage, measure. I look at welfare as a sort of health issue, and I suppose if they’re healthy, they perform better”;(Beef and Sheep 7)
“But we would hope that we are doing everything and more to, if you create the best environment that you can create, within reason, and can keep them as happy and healthy as you can”(Dairy 11)
As alluded to in the prior narrative, farmers also stressed their own role within the ‘good husbandry’ frame, where they emphasised the importance of (iii) doing the best they can, for their animals:“Just treating your cow, treating them right, treating them well. As I say you want just happiness. It does sound silly, but happy cow happy herd really. Positive animal welfare, well it’s you just want things to be good. They’re never going to be perfect but you can aim for it”.(Dairy 9)
Ensuring (iv) resource needs are well met:“I suppose it’s offering the best for them. Like for me, it’s having a shed that you’d be happy if anybody came in and took a photograph over the gate in the winter time and the same in your fields. So nothing that you wouldn’t want somebody to go and see, whether it’s slat mats; that they’re well stocked and they’re clean”.(Beef and Sheep 3)
and reducing (v) stress:“They don’t have any further needs, they have their food there, they have got plenty of food, they’ve got a nice bed, they’ve got water, and they are content”;(Dairy 11)
“Lack of illness, just that lack of stress really is my take on it”.(Beef and Sheep 5)
were also presented as key themes within the ‘good husbandry’ frame of positive welfare.“So for me, welfare is actually quieter cattle, far easier to work with…they’re not stressed. To me, that’s more how I’d say I treat welfare”(Beef and Sheep 4)
“Positive animal welfare… [as being] about looking after your animals in a good manner and good welfare”.(Beef and Sheep 7)
3.3.2. Proactive Welfare Improvement
ensuring resource needs are met:“Trying to make them live comfortably for as long as they can, trying to be stress-free, pain-free, injury-free”,(Dairy 6)
and the importance of health and happiness:“Just providing enough, providing all the things they need, the food and water, the other animals to keep them company and the disease, the treatment of disease whenever possible. Things like clipping feet and trimming feet when they need it, just the things that you need to do to keep them content”,(Beef and Sheep 10)
“It means that the animals should be happy, contented and healthy”.(Dairy 1)
where ‘being proactive’ meant doing things to improve welfare beyond basic standards or norms:“It is about being proactive”(Beef and Sheep 2)
“I guess taking what we’ve got and improving on it. Accepting where we are and trying to get better”,(Beef and Sheep 9)
“And then that is your farm, you have got this slightly higher, you are doing better than you have to, yeah high, I suppose positive: higher than you need to be, crossing a bar, that is a definite again”.(Beef and Sheep 10)
“I don’t think you can be successful without exhibiting some positive animal welfare. With that kind of thing, I am sure there are aspects that every farm can improve and most farmers will strive to improve them…. I think we are conscious of, well I am conscious of anyway, the next thing that you should be improving is the thing that you feel least comfortable showing to somebody”.(Dairy 6)
“If you think you have already done all you can do, and you can’t get any better, then you will never get any better. But if you have some kind of goal…There is always a goal and an achievement that you should look to and if that means, if that is positive animal welfare then that is positive thinking. You have to think that you could improve somewhere, something, otherwise what are you working towards? You will never sustain yourself if you reach a level and then decide that you’ve reached. Like if we thought we’d bred the best cow we were ever going to breed, then we might as well give up now because we are never going to breed another one. That is the way I see it…. [Overall]….It sounds to me like it’s something that is going to be a benefit to us. So if it’s positive animal welfare it is positive for the animal but it is also positive for our system as well. That is essentially what it means”.(Dairy 8)
3.3.3. Animal’s Point of View
“Positive animal welfare. I think it is putting, the way I see that is you would look at the cow’s perspective on life rather than yours. What would the cow want out of life rather than what you would want the cow to have? What would the cow want to do?”.(Dairy 5)
“And if animals, I mean you can’t tell me that when you have lambs at about 4-6 weeks, and they start jumping up on the silage bales, they are not playing. You know, they are not jumping up on the silage bales to get food. Or to have sex, which is what all the psychologists seem to think motivates all of us…. You know, they are playing, they run around and they form a gang… so, farms need to be places where they can do that”.(Mixed 1)
“Positive animal welfare…. It’s giving all animals, no matter what their species, a positive life. Positive environment. Just actively constantly thinking what’s right for this animal in this system. Within this production system, what’s the positive?”.(Mixed 2)
“What would the cow want to do? I feel as if we underestimate that. We think we know, and we think we can, because it is an animal, we herd it and we tell it what to do and all the rest of it. Might be right, but I think we should still look at what the cow wants. I know that my cows, and again…we’ve got mats and everything else, scraper systems, and washed down every day, everything is washed every day and clean and the cows are clean. But the cow is still, and you know they’ve got lovely high quality, again prize-winning silage and a TMR mix that has all been designed by nutritionists and all the rest, and analysed and sampled and footered about with, and the length of the straw that we chop in to it, it’s got to the right length of it, it’s all there. But they are still right keen to go out of the house, so you’ve got to let the cow go out. You’ve got to let it go out…because that cow will reward you by you giving it it’s choice”.
3.4. Farmers’ Response to Positive Animal Welfare
Consequently, many farmers were perturbed, and understandably defensive, about what ‘positive animal welfare’, due to its associations with negative, could engender in wider society:“I don’t know, the positive bit doesn’t seem right. The word positive doesn’t seem right. The positive, the first thing you think of when someone says positive is negative. I would say. I would say by emphasising that, you would make people think; well there is positive but that means there must be negative. What word would you put instead? I don’t know, I can’t think of another word, but to me, that, whenever you say positive you invite the comparison towards negative”.(Beef and Sheep 10)
“Why would they want to do that? Is it that they think that we are not having a positive welfare outlook?”.(Beef and Sheep 1)
“When I hear the term positive welfare, ahh, I suppose I start to be fearful of that term; positive animal welfare, because I think it sort of nearly, we get painted, farmers get pained in an unfair light most of the time”.(Beef and Sheep 6)
“My only concern would be…would it be perceived as, well why are you promoting that? Why is that not happening already? Kind of a thing”.(Dairy 3)
or something which would differentiate them from others:“I think positive animal welfare, I think that’s what we need to promote to a wider public; we are going beyond the, beyond what we do, beyond what the public perceive us to be doing”;(Dairy 12)
or as something that would enable a desired re-framing of welfare within the farming community:“It would be nice to think that we could get recognised more for the extra effort and that. And we’re not saying that other people don’t go that extra mile…. But how do we get recognised between trying to do the best we can do, and also maybe somebody further down the road that is just getting by and probably could do a lot more to make that a nice place, a nicer environment”;(Dairy 11)
“Relief—because for too long the word welfare is something that as farmers we have shied away from. We say ’Oh, there’s none of that here, I know we’ve got it but’. Welfare is the chronically lame sheep, it’s a dead lamb that has never been seen and has never been lifted. It is something that you don’t want to see. It is something that you just don’t want to know about and it’s the little guy with a clipboard at the market that is kind of peering over the pen and gives you a look. And that is what welfare has meant. Whereas that is not what it is at all, that is cruelty. Welfare is about the things that actually make us profitable as a business. It’s about the things that help us stay in business…. I think it is a bit of a stumbling block for the industry… we need to get our heads over that. And I think it is a shame that welfare has become about something that you want to hide because somebody might pick on you for having a lame sheep. And we all have lame sheep”.(Beef and Sheep 9)
4. Discussion
5. Implications for the Framing of Positive Welfare in Communication
6. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Sector | Gender | Age | Farm Size (Ha) | Number of Animals | System |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dairy | |||||
1 | Male | 30–40 | 130 | 100–200 | Pasture |
2 | Male | 50–60 | 137 | 200–300 | Pasture |
3 | Male | 18–30 | 62 | 100–200 | Pasture |
4 | Male | 30–40 | 343 | 700–800 | Zero-grazed |
5 | Male | 50–60 | 283 | 100–200 | Pasture |
6 | Male | 30–40 | 160 | 300–400 | Pasture and robotic milking |
7 | Male | 40–50 | 344 | 300–400 | Pasture and zero-grazed, non-robotic and robotic milking |
8 | Male | 30–40 | 100 | 100–200 | Zero-grazed |
9 | Female | 18–30 | 307 | 300–400 | Zero-grazed |
10 | Male | 40–50 | 776 | 1000–1500 | Outdoor 365 days/ year |
11 | Female | 30–40 | 687 | 400–500 | Pasture and zero-grazed |
12 | Male | 40–50 | 176 | 100–200 | Organic and robotic milking |
13 | Male | 40–50 | 283 | 800–1000 | Zero-grazed |
Beef and Sheep | |||||
1 | Male | 60–70 | 178 | 600–700 | Indoor-wintered |
2 | Male | 40–50 | 438 | 200–300 | Indoor-wintered |
3 | Male | 30–40 | 95 | 200–300 | Outdoor-wintered |
4 | Male | 50–60 | 230 | 400–500 | Outdoor-wintered |
5 | Female | 30–40 | 4 | <100 | Indoor-wintered |
6 | Male | 50–60 | 100 | 400–500 | Outdoor-wintered |
7 | Male | 40–50 | 1011 | 200–300 | Indoor-wintered |
8 | Male | 60–70 | 60 | 400–500 | Outdoor-wintered |
9 | Male | 40–50 | 500 | 1000–1500 | Outdoor-wintered & Indoor-wintered |
10 | Prefer not to say | 40–50 | 750 | 1000–1500 | Indoor-wintered |
Poultry (egg) | |||||
1 | Male | 30–40 | 141 | 10000–15000 | Free range and organic |
2 | Male | 50–60 | 95 | 120000–130000 | Free range |
Mixed | |||||
1 | Male | 40–50 | 54 | 200–300 | Free range (pig and poultry), organic (all species), indoor-wintered (beef), outdoor-wintered (sheep) |
2 | Male | 30–40 | 230 | 1000–1500 | Free range (poultry), straw-housed (pig), outdoor-wintered (sheep) |
Pig | |||||
1 | Male | 30–40 | 555 | 2000–3000 | Housed (slats and straw) |
Citizen | Gender | Age | Farming Experience | Urban Rural | Dietary Preferences |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Female | 40–50 | None | Large urban | Reduced meat consumption |
2 | Female | 30–40 | None | Large urban | Reduced meat consumption |
3 | Female | 18–30 | Farming background | Rural | Vegetarian |
4 | Male | 18–30 | Visited farms | Large urban | Consume meat |
5 | Male | 18–30 | Farming background | Large urban | Reduced meat consumption |
6 | Female | 50–60 | Farming background | Rural | Consume meat |
7 | Female | 30–40 | Visited farms | Small town | Consume meat |
8 | Female | 18–30 | Visited farms | Small town | Vegetarian |
9 | Male | 18–30 | Visited farms | Large urban | Consume meat |
10 | Male | 50–60 | Farming background | Large urban | Consume meat |
11 | Female | 18–30 | None | Large urban | Reduced meat consumption |
12 | Male | 18–30 | Visited farms | Large urban | Vegan |
13 | Male | 40–50 | Visited farms | Large urban | Consume meat |
14 | Female | 18–30 | None | Large urban | Reduced meat consumption |
15 | Female | 30–40 | Visited farms | Large urban | Reduced meat consumption |
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Vigors, B. Citizens’ and Farmers’ Framing of ‘Positive Animal Welfare’ and the Implications for Framing Positive Welfare in Communication. Animals 2019, 9, 147. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani9040147
Vigors B. Citizens’ and Farmers’ Framing of ‘Positive Animal Welfare’ and the Implications for Framing Positive Welfare in Communication. Animals. 2019; 9(4):147. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani9040147
Chicago/Turabian StyleVigors, Belinda. 2019. "Citizens’ and Farmers’ Framing of ‘Positive Animal Welfare’ and the Implications for Framing Positive Welfare in Communication" Animals 9, no. 4: 147. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani9040147
APA StyleVigors, B. (2019). Citizens’ and Farmers’ Framing of ‘Positive Animal Welfare’ and the Implications for Framing Positive Welfare in Communication. Animals, 9(4), 147. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani9040147