grant

Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP190100952 [ 2019-06-03 - 2022-06-24 ]

Research Grant

[Cite as https://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP190100952]

Researchers: Emma F. Thomas (Chief Investigator) ,  Monique Crane (Chief Investigator) ,  Pascal Molenberghs (Chief Investigator) ,  Professor Winnifred Louis (Chief Investigator) ,  ARC Linkage Grant LP1701000985 (Funded by)
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Brief description Killing which averts suffering: the role of norms and empathy. Abattoir workers and butchers kill animals to prepare food, farmers to cull stock, and veterinarians to alleviate suffering. Soldiers kill other humans in war, police or security guards to protect the public, and doctors to enact legal euthanasia. Research shows that these tasks can be confronting, and even traumatic. This project aims to test the processes through which people learn socially supported palliative killing to avert suffering and their neural underpinnings, with a focus on norms and empathic distress. It will focus on two core samples: veterinarians, who must euthanize animals, and health practitioners in Victoria, where legal changes will introduce ‘voluntary assisted dying’ in mid-2019. It will investigate how practitioners learn palliative killing, and what the impact is on psychological variables such as empathy and identity. It will generate new understandings of social influence around life and death decisions, provide an evidence basis to inform policy makers, and help institutions and practitioners seeking to manage distress and respond to fast-moving, controversial policy changes.

Funding Amount $403,232

Funding Scheme Discovery Projects

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