Most Viewed Articles (last year)
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The Vegan Dystopia: Understanding the Psychosocial Experience of VystopiaPierce Veitch, Rebecca Gregson5810
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Speciesism and Perceptions of Animal Farming Practices as Predictors of Meat Consumption in Australia and Hong KongKatherine Northrope, Matthew B. Ruby2494
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Exploring Public Support for Farmed Animal Welfare Policy and Advocacy Across 23 CountriesChristopher Bryant, Christopher J. Hopwood, João Graça, Adam T. Nissen, Courtney Dillard, Andie Thompkins1852
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Meating of the Minds: Who Denies Animal Mind in Response to the Meat Paradox?Nicholas P. Tan, Brock B. Bastian, Luke D. Smillie1745
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Development of the Passive and Active Meat-Animal Dissociation Scale (MADS)Nora C. G. Benningstad, Hank Rothgerber, Jonas R. Kunst1627
Description
Psychology of Human-Animal Intergroup Relations
A new online-only, open-access journal for scientific inquiries into how humans interact with non-human animals — Free of charge for authors and readers
The goal of the journal Psychology of Human-Animal Intergroup Relations (PHAIR) is to publish scientific research on a wide range of topics related to how people perceive, treat, and interact with animals. The journal is open to studies from moral and social psychology, attitudes and persuasion, diet and health, human-animal relationships, personality/individual differences, sustainability and environmental psychology, and other related sub-fields.
PHAIR is the Official Academic Journal of the PHAIR Society. The Mission of the PHAIR Society is to provide a forum for scientific scholarship that supports justice for non-human and human animals. PHAIR welcomes a diversity of opinions about what constitutes justice and how to achieve it; the society’s primary focus is on using psychological science to help answer these questions.
Recent Articles
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Left-Wing Inertia Toward Animal Advocacy: A Research Blind SpotPierce Veitch, Rebecca GregsonApril 2026
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Evidence for the Common or Usual Name for Plant-Based Food ProductsAdam Feltz, Silke Feltz, Uyen Hoang, Jenna Holt, Yangying LiuApril 2026
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What’s in a Diet? Conceptual and Methodological Challenges in Classifying Dietary GroupsSam Vellana, Monica BarnardFebruary 2026
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Time Matters: Temporal Dimensions of Change in Animal-Product Consumption and Animal AttitudesLotte de Lint, Jessica Schiller, Laura Gagliardi, Ruşen Ali SayatJanuary 2026
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Measuring Wild Animal Welfare Attitudes: The Attitudes Towards Wild Animal Welfare ScaleWillem W. A. Sleegers, David Moss, William H. B. McAuliffe, David Reinstein, Daniela R. WaldhornOctober 2025