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  2. Pet culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pet_culture

    Additionally, business leaders have cited multiple advantages to having pet-friendly work environments such as improving company culture, boosting productivity, reducing employee turnover, boosting employer brand, improving employee satisfaction, boosting the mental and physical health of workers and giving employees more flexibility.

  3. Pet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pet

    As the popularity of pet-keeping in the modern sense rose during the Victorian era, animals became a fixture within urban culture as commodities and decorative objects. [70] Pet keeping generated a commercial opportunity for entrepreneurs. By the mid-19th century, nearly twenty thousand street vendors in London dealt with live animals. [71]

  4. Pet culture in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pet_culture_in_Japan

    Pet culture in Japan has a long history going back centuries, especially in regards to cats. Pets were originally referred to as aigandōbutsu (愛玩動物 lit. "beloved toy-animal") or short-form aiganbutsu , but the terminology has changed in the 20th century into the anglicised petto (ペット).

  5. Pet humanization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pet_humanization

    Pet bereavement and pet humanization are two concepts that are closely related and often intersect in the realm of human-pet relationships. [17] [18] [19] Pet bereavement is the emotional response that pet owners experience when their pets pass away. It involves a range of emotions similar to the mourning process for a human loved one. [20] [21 ...

  6. Pets in South Korea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pets_in_South_Korea

    Pet ownership in South Korea has increased in recent years. [1] Dogs are the most common household animal, owned by 75.3% of pet-owning South Korean households, followed by cats, then goldfish. South Korean pet culture is constantly developing, and the companion animal industry in South Korea is worth an estimated 3.4 trillion won as of 2020.

  7. Dogfree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dogfree

    Dogfree is a hygienic, environmental and social movement based around people who dislike domestic pet dogs and dog ownership in general.. People who identify as "dogfree", generally speaking, do not support the abuse or mistreatment of domestic dogs but strongly disagree with the concept of dog ownership, Western culture's integration of dogs into media, relationships and public spaces, dogs ...

  8. Animal culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_culture

    A further definition of culture is, "[s]ocially transmitted behavior patterns that serve to relate human communities to their ecological settings." [15] This definition connects cultural behavior to the environment. Since culture is a form of adaptation to one's environment, it is mirrored in many aspects of our current and past societies.

  9. Dog fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog_fashion

    There is a clear distinction between pet shows [9] and pet fashion shows. The pet fashion show's emphasis is on the clothes, not on the dog. In countries all over the world, pet fashion shows are becoming increasingly popular. [10] [1] [11] [12] During these shows, well groomed pets strut down the runway wearing high fashion clothes.