In recent years, the vegan lifestyle has transcended mere dietary preference to become a profound ethical commitment encompassing the refusal of all animal-derived products. However, this dedication is not without its complexities, particularly in a society where omnivorous consumption remains the norm. A groundbreaking study from Concordia University sheds light on the intricate social dynamics and relational tensions experienced by vegans navigating a predominantly omnivorous world. This research, published in the Journal of Consumer Research, provides a novel analytical framework for understanding the social fractures encountered by vegans and the sophisticated strategies they employ to maintain their ethical choices amid external pressures.
The core challenge for vegans lies in reconciling their ethical imperatives with existing social norms that are deeply rooted in animal product consumption. The study, initiated by Aya Aboelenien and supervised by Zeynep Arsel from Concordia’s Department of Marketing, adopts an ethnographic and observational methodology including qualitative interviews, participatory observations at vegan community events, and critical analysis of digital discourse across online platforms like Reddit. This comprehensive approach enables a multi-dimensional examination of veganism’s relational impacts at both interpersonal and community levels.
Central to the findings is the identification of three distinct categories of relational fractures that contribute to social strain. The first, termed co-performance fractures, describes tensions arising when vegans’ dietary practices disrupt shared activities, particularly communal dining. Introducing vegan preferences into established eating rituals frequently necessitates accommodations by omnivorous counterparts, often eliciting resistance manifesting as perceived inconvenience or interpersonal labeling of vegans as difficult. This dynamic encapsulates how ethical consumption choices can engender conflict within seemingly routine social interactions.
The second category, co-learning fractures, emerges primarily within the vegan community itself. Here, conflicts arise over the definition and boundaries of what constitutes ‘true’ veganism, as well as the degree of engagement with non-vegan individuals. The rigidity associated with purist stances may alienate new adopters or those exploring veganism, creating in-group fractures that complicate community cohesion. This finding highlights the paradox where ethical commitment intended to foster solidarity instead engenders exclusionary practices.
The third type, marketplace fractures, reflect structural impediments where conventional food retail and service industries fail to adequately accommodate vegan dietary needs. Despite growth in plant-based product availability, most commercial food environments remain tailored to omnivorous consumption patterns, rendering vegan sustenance options scarce and inconvenient. This systemic disconnect underscores the broader socio-economic challenges vegans face beyond personal relationships.
The psychological and social consequences of these fractures are profound. Participants frequently reported feelings of isolation and frustration, with many citing social stress as a primary driver for abandoning vegan practices. This retreat underscores the high cost of ethical consumption in social contexts resistant to change and adaptability. Thus, vegan identity becomes precarious, vulnerable to sociocultural pressures and interpersonal conflicts.
To navigate these multifaceted challenges, vegans deploy an array of adaptive social skills conceptualized in the study as decoding, decoupling, divesting, and chameleoning. Decoding involves interpretive efforts to articulate ethical motivations and educate others, a communicative strategy aimed at bridging understanding gaps. Decoupling denotes a parallel coexistence strategy, where vegans maintain their principles while minimizing conflict, such as BYO (bring your own) meal practices that enable social participation without dietary compromise.
Divesting represents a more absolute approach, entailing deliberate avoidance of shared food experiences with non-vegans to eliminate relational conflicts entirely. This uncompromising tactic reinforces personal boundaries but may exacerbate social isolation. Chameleoning, conversely, is characterized by situational ethical flexibility, whereby individuals selectively conform to dominant dietary norms to preserve social harmony, occasionally compromising vegan tenets for relational stability.
While this research centers on veganism, its implications extend broadly to ethical consumption behaviors that diverge from societal conventions, including sustainable consumption and adoption of green technologies such as electric vehicles. The researchers underscore that moral positioning in consumption invariably introduces relational friction, as deviations challenge established social and cultural practices ingrained over generations.
The study’s insights contribute significantly to the interdisciplinary field of consumer behavior, moral psychology, and social interaction by elucidating the nuanced relational dynamics that underpin ethical lifestyle choices. It advances theoretical understanding by framing veganism as a site of dynamic negotiation, identity assertion, and social boundary management within a largely omnivorous milieu. Practically, it offers a foundation for developing support infrastructures, policy frameworks, and community initiatives that can alleviate these relational tensions and facilitate ethical consumption at a societal scale.
In sum, this landmark study captures the complex interplay between individual ethics and social conformity, illustrating that moral consumption is not merely a personal act but a profound social phenomenon implicated in ongoing processes of inclusion, exclusion, and identity construction. Its findings illuminate the persistent frictions that arise when ethical imperatives intersect with entrenched cultural norms, charting pathways for both scholarship and activism dedicated to sustainable and humane consumption patterns.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Surviving as a Vegan in a World of Omnivores: Relational Fractures in Shared Practices
News Publication Date: September 2, 2025
Web References: https://academic.oup.com/jcr/advance-article/doi/10.1093/jcr/ucaf052/8245827
References: Aya Aboelenien, Zeynep Arsel, “Surviving as a Vegan in a World of Omnivores: Relational Fractures in Shared Practices,” Journal of Consumer Research, DOI: 10.1093/jcr/ucaf052
Keywords: Human behavior, Social interaction, Social networks, Conformism, Group behavior, Vegetarianism, Human social behavior

