Breeding Blues: an ethical evaluation of the plan to reduce calving difficulties in Danish Blue cattle

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearch

Standard

Breeding Blues : an ethical evaluation of the plan to reduce calving difficulties in Danish Blue cattle. / Sandøe, Peter; Theut, L.F. ; Denwood, Matt.

Professionals in food chains: EurSafe 2018. ed. / Svenja Springer; Herwig Grimm. Wageningen Academic Publishers, 2018. p. 134-140.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearch

Harvard

Sandøe, P, Theut, LF & Denwood, M 2018, Breeding Blues: an ethical evaluation of the plan to reduce calving difficulties in Danish Blue cattle. in S Springer & H Grimm (eds), Professionals in food chains: EurSafe 2018. Wageningen Academic Publishers, pp. 134-140, Congress of the European Society for Agricultural and Food Ethics, Wien, Austria, 13/06/2018. https://doi.org/10.3920/978-90-8686-869-8_19

APA

Sandøe, P., Theut, L. F., & Denwood, M. (2018). Breeding Blues: an ethical evaluation of the plan to reduce calving difficulties in Danish Blue cattle. In S. Springer, & H. Grimm (Eds.), Professionals in food chains: EurSafe 2018 (pp. 134-140). Wageningen Academic Publishers. https://doi.org/10.3920/978-90-8686-869-8_19

Vancouver

Sandøe P, Theut LF, Denwood M. Breeding Blues: an ethical evaluation of the plan to reduce calving difficulties in Danish Blue cattle. In Springer S, Grimm H, editors, Professionals in food chains: EurSafe 2018. Wageningen Academic Publishers. 2018. p. 134-140 https://doi.org/10.3920/978-90-8686-869-8_19

Author

Sandøe, Peter ; Theut, L.F. ; Denwood, Matt. / Breeding Blues : an ethical evaluation of the plan to reduce calving difficulties in Danish Blue cattle. Professionals in food chains: EurSafe 2018. editor / Svenja Springer ; Herwig Grimm. Wageningen Academic Publishers, 2018. pp. 134-140

Bibtex

@inproceedings{69633f6cac134cd686cccc6fa6b13084,
title = "Breeding Blues: an ethical evaluation of the plan to reduce calving difficulties in Danish Blue cattle",
abstract = "Danish Blue Cattle is a breed of cattle originating from the Belgian White Blue Cattle (BWB), a breed that is characterized by double muscling, which in turn may lead to difficult calving. In Belgium, difficult calving in this breed is typically pre-empted by means of planned caesarean sections (CS). The breed association, under some pressure from its parent organisation the National Cattle Committee, first implemented an action plan to reduce the rate of CS following a media event and subsequent reactions from politicians in Denmark in 1998. Later, the breed association renamed the breed from Belgian White Blue to Danish Blue Cattle in an effort to distance the breed from its Belgian origin. The aim of this paper is to undertake an ethical evaluation of how this issue was handled, with specific focus on the actions of the breed association and the National Cattle Committee. This evaluation involves an objective assessment of the outcome of the action plan as well as a wider ethical assessment of the rationale and actions of the professional organisations in charge. We begin by describing the controversy in 1998, which led to the aforementioned action plan. Then, we evaluate how successful the action plan has been in achieving its stated goals. These results show that the action plan has achieved a decrease in the rate of CS from over 50% between 1990-1998 to below 10% between 2000-2013. There has also been a significant decrease in the rate of other types of difficult births in the breed. Finally, we evaluate the implementation of the action plan from the perspective of professional ethics, where the aim is to handle public controversies in such a way as to maintain acceptance from the surrounding society. This has clearly been a success. However, viewed from a consequentialist perspective with a focus on animal welfare, the outcome is more ambiguous. The welfare for Danish Blue cattle has improved, but on the other hand the breed still has a much higher level of CS than comparable breeds of cattle in Denmark.",
author = "Peter Sand{\o}e and L.F. Theut and Matt Denwood",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.3920/978-90-8686-869-8_19",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-90-8686-321-1",
pages = "134--140",
editor = "Springer, {Svenja } and Herwig Grimm",
booktitle = "Professionals in food chains",
publisher = "Wageningen Academic Publishers",
address = "Netherlands",
note = " Congress of the European Society for Agricultural and Food Ethics : Professionals in food chains, EurSafe ; Conference date: 13-06-2018 Through 16-06-2018",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Breeding Blues

T2 - Congress of the European Society for Agricultural and Food Ethics

AU - Sandøe, Peter

AU - Theut, L.F.

AU - Denwood, Matt

N1 - Conference code: 14

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Danish Blue Cattle is a breed of cattle originating from the Belgian White Blue Cattle (BWB), a breed that is characterized by double muscling, which in turn may lead to difficult calving. In Belgium, difficult calving in this breed is typically pre-empted by means of planned caesarean sections (CS). The breed association, under some pressure from its parent organisation the National Cattle Committee, first implemented an action plan to reduce the rate of CS following a media event and subsequent reactions from politicians in Denmark in 1998. Later, the breed association renamed the breed from Belgian White Blue to Danish Blue Cattle in an effort to distance the breed from its Belgian origin. The aim of this paper is to undertake an ethical evaluation of how this issue was handled, with specific focus on the actions of the breed association and the National Cattle Committee. This evaluation involves an objective assessment of the outcome of the action plan as well as a wider ethical assessment of the rationale and actions of the professional organisations in charge. We begin by describing the controversy in 1998, which led to the aforementioned action plan. Then, we evaluate how successful the action plan has been in achieving its stated goals. These results show that the action plan has achieved a decrease in the rate of CS from over 50% between 1990-1998 to below 10% between 2000-2013. There has also been a significant decrease in the rate of other types of difficult births in the breed. Finally, we evaluate the implementation of the action plan from the perspective of professional ethics, where the aim is to handle public controversies in such a way as to maintain acceptance from the surrounding society. This has clearly been a success. However, viewed from a consequentialist perspective with a focus on animal welfare, the outcome is more ambiguous. The welfare for Danish Blue cattle has improved, but on the other hand the breed still has a much higher level of CS than comparable breeds of cattle in Denmark.

AB - Danish Blue Cattle is a breed of cattle originating from the Belgian White Blue Cattle (BWB), a breed that is characterized by double muscling, which in turn may lead to difficult calving. In Belgium, difficult calving in this breed is typically pre-empted by means of planned caesarean sections (CS). The breed association, under some pressure from its parent organisation the National Cattle Committee, first implemented an action plan to reduce the rate of CS following a media event and subsequent reactions from politicians in Denmark in 1998. Later, the breed association renamed the breed from Belgian White Blue to Danish Blue Cattle in an effort to distance the breed from its Belgian origin. The aim of this paper is to undertake an ethical evaluation of how this issue was handled, with specific focus on the actions of the breed association and the National Cattle Committee. This evaluation involves an objective assessment of the outcome of the action plan as well as a wider ethical assessment of the rationale and actions of the professional organisations in charge. We begin by describing the controversy in 1998, which led to the aforementioned action plan. Then, we evaluate how successful the action plan has been in achieving its stated goals. These results show that the action plan has achieved a decrease in the rate of CS from over 50% between 1990-1998 to below 10% between 2000-2013. There has also been a significant decrease in the rate of other types of difficult births in the breed. Finally, we evaluate the implementation of the action plan from the perspective of professional ethics, where the aim is to handle public controversies in such a way as to maintain acceptance from the surrounding society. This has clearly been a success. However, viewed from a consequentialist perspective with a focus on animal welfare, the outcome is more ambiguous. The welfare for Danish Blue cattle has improved, but on the other hand the breed still has a much higher level of CS than comparable breeds of cattle in Denmark.

U2 - 10.3920/978-90-8686-869-8_19

DO - 10.3920/978-90-8686-869-8_19

M3 - Article in proceedings

SN - 978-90-8686-321-1

SP - 134

EP - 140

BT - Professionals in food chains

A2 - Springer, Svenja

A2 - Grimm, Herwig

PB - Wageningen Academic Publishers

Y2 - 13 June 2018 through 16 June 2018

ER -

ID: 199029297