Attitudes towards recreational hunting: a quantitative survey of the general public in Denmark

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Attitudes towards recreational hunting : a quantitative survey of the general public in Denmark. / Gamborg, Christian; Jensen, Frank Søndergaard.

In: Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism, Vol. 17, 2017, p. 20-28.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Gamborg, C & Jensen, FS 2017, 'Attitudes towards recreational hunting: a quantitative survey of the general public in Denmark', Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism, vol. 17, pp. 20-28. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jort.2016.12.002

APA

Gamborg, C., & Jensen, F. S. (2017). Attitudes towards recreational hunting: a quantitative survey of the general public in Denmark. Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism, 17, 20-28. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jort.2016.12.002

Vancouver

Gamborg C, Jensen FS. Attitudes towards recreational hunting: a quantitative survey of the general public in Denmark. Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism. 2017;17:20-28. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jort.2016.12.002

Author

Gamborg, Christian ; Jensen, Frank Søndergaard. / Attitudes towards recreational hunting : a quantitative survey of the general public in Denmark. In: Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism. 2017 ; Vol. 17. pp. 20-28.

Bibtex

@article{114c722142894a2eaeff5174000af54b,
title = "Attitudes towards recreational hunting: a quantitative survey of the general public in Denmark",
abstract = "What is the attitude of the general public towards hunting? As a recreational activity, hunting stands apart from other forms of outdoor recreation like birdwatching in that it involves the pursuit and killing of wild animals. Today, it is in a tight spot. It has been criticized from animal ethics points of view, but it has also been commended as an activity which allows us to take responsibility for procuring our own food. The paper reports a national survey of the general public using an Internet-based questionnaire sent to a representative sample of the Danish public in 2012 (n=1001). Attitudes towards recreational hunting among the adult general public were examined in relation to gender, age, education, income and residence, association with hunters, hunting conditions, and wildlife value orientations. 43% of the general public had a positive attitude, 31% were indifferent, and 26% had a negative attitude to recreational hunting. Older respondents and rural residents had more positive attitudes towards hunting than younger and urban residents. Some of the conditions under which hunting occurs affected attitudes negatively, especially the hunting of farm-reared and released game birds, hunting organized as a group hunt, and single day leases of hunting grounds. Respondents with a “mutualist” wildlife value orientation had the most negative attitude towards hunting (39%), “distanced” respondents were the most indifferent (44%), and “utilitarians” were the most positive (61%). Assessing levels of public support for recreational hunting is important if we are to gauge whether hunting as a recreational and socio-cultural activity can be sustained. A rethink of hunting as part of the leisure industry should be considered, because the least positive attitudes were found in relation to the commercial aspect of hunting and this could result in tighter regulation with further effects on management practices. Management Implications The public opinions and public preferences concerning recreational hunting are complex. However, this study revealed some factors relevant for regulatory and managerial development in relation to outdoor recreation: age (younger respondents were least supportive of hunting), urbanisation (living in an urban environment enhanced negative attitudes), compatibility of recreational hunting with other outdoor leisure activities.",
keywords = "Distanced, Europe, Hunting attitudes, Urbanized, Wildlife values",
author = "Christian Gamborg and Jensen, {Frank S{\o}ndergaard}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1016/j.jort.2016.12.002",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "20--28",
journal = "Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism",
issn = "2213-0780",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Attitudes towards recreational hunting

T2 - a quantitative survey of the general public in Denmark

AU - Gamborg, Christian

AU - Jensen, Frank Søndergaard

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - What is the attitude of the general public towards hunting? As a recreational activity, hunting stands apart from other forms of outdoor recreation like birdwatching in that it involves the pursuit and killing of wild animals. Today, it is in a tight spot. It has been criticized from animal ethics points of view, but it has also been commended as an activity which allows us to take responsibility for procuring our own food. The paper reports a national survey of the general public using an Internet-based questionnaire sent to a representative sample of the Danish public in 2012 (n=1001). Attitudes towards recreational hunting among the adult general public were examined in relation to gender, age, education, income and residence, association with hunters, hunting conditions, and wildlife value orientations. 43% of the general public had a positive attitude, 31% were indifferent, and 26% had a negative attitude to recreational hunting. Older respondents and rural residents had more positive attitudes towards hunting than younger and urban residents. Some of the conditions under which hunting occurs affected attitudes negatively, especially the hunting of farm-reared and released game birds, hunting organized as a group hunt, and single day leases of hunting grounds. Respondents with a “mutualist” wildlife value orientation had the most negative attitude towards hunting (39%), “distanced” respondents were the most indifferent (44%), and “utilitarians” were the most positive (61%). Assessing levels of public support for recreational hunting is important if we are to gauge whether hunting as a recreational and socio-cultural activity can be sustained. A rethink of hunting as part of the leisure industry should be considered, because the least positive attitudes were found in relation to the commercial aspect of hunting and this could result in tighter regulation with further effects on management practices. Management Implications The public opinions and public preferences concerning recreational hunting are complex. However, this study revealed some factors relevant for regulatory and managerial development in relation to outdoor recreation: age (younger respondents were least supportive of hunting), urbanisation (living in an urban environment enhanced negative attitudes), compatibility of recreational hunting with other outdoor leisure activities.

AB - What is the attitude of the general public towards hunting? As a recreational activity, hunting stands apart from other forms of outdoor recreation like birdwatching in that it involves the pursuit and killing of wild animals. Today, it is in a tight spot. It has been criticized from animal ethics points of view, but it has also been commended as an activity which allows us to take responsibility for procuring our own food. The paper reports a national survey of the general public using an Internet-based questionnaire sent to a representative sample of the Danish public in 2012 (n=1001). Attitudes towards recreational hunting among the adult general public were examined in relation to gender, age, education, income and residence, association with hunters, hunting conditions, and wildlife value orientations. 43% of the general public had a positive attitude, 31% were indifferent, and 26% had a negative attitude to recreational hunting. Older respondents and rural residents had more positive attitudes towards hunting than younger and urban residents. Some of the conditions under which hunting occurs affected attitudes negatively, especially the hunting of farm-reared and released game birds, hunting organized as a group hunt, and single day leases of hunting grounds. Respondents with a “mutualist” wildlife value orientation had the most negative attitude towards hunting (39%), “distanced” respondents were the most indifferent (44%), and “utilitarians” were the most positive (61%). Assessing levels of public support for recreational hunting is important if we are to gauge whether hunting as a recreational and socio-cultural activity can be sustained. A rethink of hunting as part of the leisure industry should be considered, because the least positive attitudes were found in relation to the commercial aspect of hunting and this could result in tighter regulation with further effects on management practices. Management Implications The public opinions and public preferences concerning recreational hunting are complex. However, this study revealed some factors relevant for regulatory and managerial development in relation to outdoor recreation: age (younger respondents were least supportive of hunting), urbanisation (living in an urban environment enhanced negative attitudes), compatibility of recreational hunting with other outdoor leisure activities.

KW - Distanced

KW - Europe

KW - Hunting attitudes

KW - Urbanized

KW - Wildlife values

U2 - 10.1016/j.jort.2016.12.002

DO - 10.1016/j.jort.2016.12.002

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 20

EP - 28

JO - Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism

JF - Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism

SN - 2213-0780

ER -

ID: 171584099