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Plant Based Universities helps make Uni-veg-sities

Jacob Dawson News Writer

Plant-Based Universities (PBU) is a student-led organisation operating out of over forty UK universities with the sole aim of making catering in universities 100% plant-based to reduce university contributions to the climate crisis. The group has seen success in recent times with their biggest wins taking place at the University of Cambridge, where activists led a vote to enter talks with the catering team to remove all animal products in their menus. This followed a landmark vote at the University of Stirling where students voted for their student union to transition to 100% plant based catering by 2025.

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The organisation follows a simple three-step campaign plan in order to achieve their aims. This includes ‘Research and Engaging with the Student Population, Engaging with University and Student Union Internal Democratic Processes and Direct Action-based on necessity.’ successful in universities up and down the UK, with some notable wins in Cambridge and an upcoming vote at the Guild of Students at the University of Birmingham.

Despite work by the organisation to hold healthy debates with students on both sides of the issue, PBU has been subjected to criticism. In some cases, activists at the University of Stirling had notes pinned to the doors of their private accommodation saying ‘Dear Vegans, please stop forcing veganism on the uni’.

PBU accept the need for nonviolent direct action in their attempt to solve one of the major issues which they argue drives climate change and the ecocide. This works in tandem with PBU’s focus on education and student democracy. Like other climate movements this often involves talking to students on the street about their agenda and building a strong grassroots support which is then used in student union votes to promote their agenda. This strategy has so far been

With the climate crisis escalating day by day, Plant Based Universities is highlighting what they see as one of the main drivers of the climate crisis while aiming to tackle it in a way which has democratic processes and healthy debate at its heart. Despite criticism from students, arguing that Plant Based Universities are restricting students' choice to have meat on campus, they acknowledge that they are in fact not pursuing an outright ban of animal products on university campuses. With veganism, vegetarianism and allergy-friendly food needs all on the rise in the UK, movements towards providing more low-cost, plant-based options are being welcomed, with YouGov polling highlights that, as of January 2023, up to 25% of the population would consider themselves as vegan, vegetarian, pescetarian or flexitarian. At the University of Birmingham small steps have already been taken to provide more vegan and vegetarian options on campus, oat milk will now be the default option at one campus outlet.

By pursuing a vegan and vegetarian agenda on campuses up and down the country, Plant Based Universities are contributing to a growing student movement concerned with pioneering sustainability and radical climate action through means of collective action. gradual student democracy.

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