Department of People and Society, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Alnarp, Sweden.
Department of Plant Breeding, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Alnarp, Sweden.
GM Crops Food. 2021 Jan 2;12(1):342-360. doi: 10.1080/21645698.2021.1921544.
This study examined public attitudes to genetic modification (GM) and conventional plant breeding and explored general differences in attitudes to these two types of breeding concepts, including the effect of individual personal characteristics such as gender and age. It also sought to identify the influence of personal values linked to attitudes to GM crops and conventional plant breeding, following Schwartz value theory. Relations between specific values and attitudes to GM organisms (GMOs) have been studied previously, but not gender- and age-specific relations between specific values and attitudes to conventional plant breeding. Data were collected in this study using a questionnaire completed on-line by 1500 Swedish consumers in 2019. The questionnaire covered three different aspects: 1) sociodemographic data, including gender and age; 2) attitudes to GMO/conventional plant breeding; and 3) values, measured using the human values scale. It was found that consumers expressed more positive attitudes to conventional plant breeding than to GMO, men expressed more positive attitudes to both conventional plant breeding and GMO than women did, and younger consumers expressed more positive attitudes to GMO than older consumers did. A negative correlation between attitudes to conventional plant breeding and the value 'tradition', but no correlation to 'universalism', 'benevolence', 'power' or 'achievement', was identified for men. For women, correlations between attitudes to conventional plant breeding and 'benevolence' (neg.) and 'achievement' (pos.) were found. For both men and women, attitudes to GMO were negatively influenced by 'universalism' and 'benevolence', and positively influenced by 'power' and 'achievement'. The implications of these results are discussed.
本研究考察了公众对基因改良(GM)和传统植物育种的态度,并探讨了这两种类型的育种概念在态度上的一般差异,包括个人特征(如性别和年龄)的影响。它还试图根据施瓦茨价值观理论,确定与对 GM 作物和传统植物育种的态度相关的个人价值观的影响。以前已经研究了特定价值观与对 GM 生物的态度之间的关系,但没有研究特定价值观与对传统植物育种的态度之间的性别和年龄特定关系。本研究通过 2019 年瑞典 1500 名消费者在线完成的问卷收集数据。问卷涵盖了三个不同方面:1)社会人口数据,包括性别和年龄;2)对 GMO/传统植物育种的态度;3)价值观,使用人类价值观量表进行衡量。研究结果表明,消费者对传统植物育种的态度比对 GMO 的态度更为积极,男性对传统植物育种和 GMO 的态度都比女性更为积极,年轻消费者对 GMO 的态度比对年长消费者更为积极。对于男性来说,传统植物育种态度与“传统”呈负相关,但与“普遍主义”、“善良”、“权力”或“成就”无关。对于女性来说,传统植物育种态度与“善良”(负相关)和“成就”(正相关)之间存在相关性。对于男性和女性来说,对 GMO 的态度受到“普遍主义”和“善良”的负面影响,以及“权力”和“成就”的正面影响。讨论了这些结果的含义。