An ethnographic account of the british equestrian virtue of bravery, and its implications for equine welfare

HIGHLIGHTS

  • who: Rosalie Jones McVey from the improve confidence issues without instilling a ‘get tough' approach are likely to have positive implications for horse welfare and human safetyThere is good rationale for educating influential equestrian professionals about equestrian culture as well as equine welfare in a bid to improve the latter. Those trying to provide accessible knowledge to improve equine welfare would do well to understand the ethical commitments that riders hold within different forms of narrative understanding. Stories about horses are not surface layers that are easily discarded, but deeply entwined within riders' sense of identity and . . .

     

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