Ethical Concerns in Poultry Production: A German Consumer Survey About Dual Purpose Chickens

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Abstract

The paper offers insights into the acceptability of ethical issues in poultry production and how this situation provides an opportunity to transform the prevailing system into a more sustainable one. The survey among German consumers reveals that killing day-old chicks is a well-known practice and is rated as “very problematic”. In contrast, dual-purpose chickens are mostly unknown but are considered a positive alternative to killing day-old chicks (after the concept has been explained). Consumer clusters were identified regarding purchasing criteria for dual-purpose chickens, purchasing routines and socio-economic factors. Three of the five clusters—the perfectionists, idealists, and realists—turned out to be potential buyers. To develop a suitable marketing strategy, it is recommended that the added value of dual-purpose chickens be comprehensibly communicated. From a multi-level perspective, rearing dual-purpose chickens has a competitive disadvantage compared to system-compliant alternatives (in-ovo sexing, “lay hen brothers”). Through increasing external pressure, the different alternatives can jointly contribute to a regime shift.

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APA

Busse, M., Kernecker, M. L., Zscheischler, J., Zoll, F., & Siebert, R. (2019). Ethical Concerns in Poultry Production: A German Consumer Survey About Dual Purpose Chickens. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics, 32(5–6), 905–925. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10806-019-09806-y

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