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Veganuary is an annual challenge run by a UK nonprofit organisation that promotes and educates about veganism by encouraging people to follow a vegan lifestyle for the month of January. Since the event began in 2014, participation has increased each year. 400,000 people signed up to the 2020 campaign. The campaign estimated this represented the carbon dioxide equivalent of 450,000 flights and the lives of more than a million animals. Veganuary can also refer to the event itself.


History

Founded by Jane Land and
Matthew Glover Matthew Glover is a British businessman and co-founder of the Veganuary movement, which his wife Jane Land helped to create. He advocates for pragmatism when communicating with farmers, food manufacturers, retailers and restaurants, and a collab ...
, the first event was during January 2014. In 2015 the project registered 12,800 sign-ups. From there the sign-ups grew to 513.663 in 2021. The name "Veganuary" is a
portmanteau A portmanteau word, or portmanteau (, ) is a blend of wordsJanuary January is the first month of the year in the Julian and Gregorian calendars and is also the first of seven months to have a length of 31 days. The first day of the month is known as New Year's Day. It is, on average, the coldest month of the ...
" itself, thus , , etc.


Programme

Veganuary is a crowdfunded campaign to issue a challenge each January promoting eating vegan for the month. Participants sign up online and receive a downloadable "starter kit" and daily support emails. They're offered an online "vegan starter kit" with restaurant guides, product directories, and a recipe database. Participants are encouraged to share images and recipes to social media, which according to academic Alexa Weik von Mossner creates a sense of community and communicates the message that veganism is easy and fun.


Reception

''Gentleman's Quarterly'' noted "it's a clever way to introduce a new way of nutritional thinking at a time of year where our mind is hardwired to explore ways to better ourselves". A January 2019 slump in UK pub receipts was blamed on Veganuary. Von Mossner notes that criticism can be raised over the fact that Veganuary uses "images with happy-looking, baby-faced animals while at the same time downplaying (though not completely omitting) the horrific truth about the lives and deaths of the actual animals that are nevertheless slaughtered everyday for human consumption". Another point of criticism may be "the campaign's strict emphasis on food rather than on other aspects of the vegan lifestyle and worldview". Tobias Leenaert postulated the popularity of the campaign may be partially due to the organizers' decision to promote "trying" veganism for a specific period vs. "going vegan", which allows participants to decide not to continue with an all-vegan diet without feeling as if they've failed. Von Mossner agrees and points to the "light-hearted" and generally positive tone of the promotional materials, which feature attractive and "frequently ''named'' animals" with captions like, "Save little Eric—Try Vegan this January" rather than images of animal abuse.


Impact

Food businesses and restaurants in the UK have been introducing new vegan products in January to coincide with Veganuary. The supermarkets in the UK, including
Tesco Tesco plc () is a British multinational groceries and general merchandise retailer headquartered in Welwyn Garden City, England. In 2011 it was the third-largest retailer in the world measured by gross revenues and the ninth-largest in th ...
, have been seen to run advertisements advertising Veganuary. People in the United States are now participants in the challenge. In 2019, ''The Washington Post'' reported that "46 percent of people signed up for health reasons, with 34 percent citing animal cruelty and only 12 percent climate issues." In 2020, ''The Houston Chronicle'' reported that "Texas was the state with the second-highest sign-ups in the U.S." In 2021, ''The Maine Sunday Telegram'' reported that "Annual participation continues to be biggest in Britain, but it’s slowly spreading to the U.S., along with many other countries including Mexico, Argentina, Germany and Sweden."


Participants

Participation in Veganuary has become increasingly popular, with the number of people signing up rising each year: * 2015 – 12,800 people * 2016 – 23,000 people * 2017 – 50,000 people * 2018 – 168,000 people * 2019 – 250,000 people * 2020 – 400,000 people * 2021 – 582,538 people * 2022 – 629,000 people


See also

* List of food days *
List of vegan restaurants This is a list of vegetarian and vegan restaurants. Vegetarian cuisine refers to food that meets vegetarian standards by not including meat and animal tissue products. For lacto-ovo vegetarianism (the most common type of vegetarianism in the Wes ...
*
List of vegetarian festivals Vegetarian and vegan festivals are held around the world to promote veganism and/or vegetarianism among the public and to support and link individuals and organizations that practice, promote or endorse veganism or vegetarianism. Many of these ev ...
*
Meat-free days Meat-free days or veggiedays are declared to discourage or prohibit the consumption of meat on certain days of the week. Mondays and Fridays are the most popular days. There are also movements encouraging people giving up meat on a weekly, monthl ...
* Meatless Monday * Vegan school meal * World Vegan Day *
World Vegetarian Day World Vegetarian Day is observed annually around the planet on October 1. It is a day of celebration established by the North American Vegetarian Society in 1977 and endorsed by the International Vegetarian Union in 1978, "To promote the joy, com ...


References


External links

* {{Veganism and vegetarianism Veganism in the United Kingdom January observances Charities based in England