I don’t agree with every conclusion advocated for in these sources. Like in any body of literature, I find some conclusions deeply profound and important and I find other conclusions poorly supported by evidence and reasoned argument. However, I think that engaging with this content is indispensable for any professional animal advocate.

  1. Reisman, Brown and Reisman 2022, Voices of the Movement: Toward an Equitable Farmed Animal Protection Movement, EBDI and Encompass, available online
  2. Feliz (ed) 2017, Veganism in an Oppressive World: A Vegans of Color Community Project, available from Amazon
  3. Feliz (ed) 2019, Veganism of Color: Decentering Whiteness in Human and Nonhuman Animal Liberation, available from Amazon
  4. Feliz & McNeill (eds) 2020, Queer + Trans Voices: Achieving Liberation Through Consistent Anti-Oppression, available from Amazon

The publications of Corey Lee Wrenn (Google Scholar), especially:

  1. Wrenn, Corey, and Alexus Lizardi. 2021. “Older, Greener, and Wiser: Charting the Experiences of Older Women in the American Vegan Movement.” Journal of Women & Aging 33 (6): 653–75.
  2. Wrenn, Corey Lee, Joanne Clark, Maddie Judge, Katharine A. Gilchrist, Delanie Woodlock, Katherine Dotson, Riva Spanos, and Jonothan Wrenn. 2015. “The Medicalization of Nonhuman Animal Rights: Frame Contestation and the Exploitation of Disability.” Disability & Society 30 (9): 1307–27.
  3. Wrenn, Corey Lee. 2017. “Fat Vegan Politics: A Survey of Fat Vegan Activists’ Online Experiences with Social Movement Sizeism.” Fat Studies 6 (1): 90–102.
  4. Wrenn, Corey Lee. 2015. “The Role of Professionalization Regarding Female Exploitation in the Nonhuman Animal Rights Movement.” Indian Journal of Gender Studies 24 (2): 131–46.