Plant based food makes sense for people, animals, and the planet and access to it should be a right, especially for those with deeply held ethical beliefs about eating animals. This right shouldn't be something someone loses after being incarcerated.
Posts by Michael Briscoe
This is personal to me as I teach classes as part of the Inside Out Prison Exchange Program. We read about animals and the environment in those classes. Most of my incarcerated students wouldn't necessarily go vegan, but almost all would reduce their meat consumption if they could.
I wrote a new short piece for @speciesunite.bsky.social on plant based food (and lack thereof) in prison.
www.speciesunite.com/news-stories...
Know-your-rights trainings are spreading fast as ICE steps up enforcement. But knowing the law doesn’t guarantee it’s respected, explains CSU Pueblo sociologist Heidi Reynolds-Stenson, who studies social movements and protest policing. ⬇️
I published a blog post for @vegansociology.bsky.social about my experience teaching the book Tender is the Flesh in my Crime and Society in Science Fiction class.
Check it out here:
www.vegansociology.com/2026/01/28/t...
While doing my MA I hit a deer near this stretch of highway, which was one of the catalysts for me to write my book Stocks or Stakeholders - where I advocate for wildlife crossings.
It's come full circle as the largest crossing in North America has just been built there.
Well done @colorado.gov!
So 50% say they know it improves health and 65% said they would try it if they had evidence it improved health? Something isn't squaring there.
Michael Briscoe shares fascinating data on large language models and animal issues - how does AI feel about going vegan? surprisingly positive! #IAVS2025
And we’re off! Our 6th annual vegan sociology conference starts today, still time to join us for a fab suite of vegan sociologies of emotions and the senses #IAVS2025
A screenshot of the homepage of Contexts.org shows a new blog post titled "A Closer Look at Ideology *and* Truth on Campus: A Response to Eppard and Mackey." The image shows a lecturer in a campus lecture hall.
A screenshot from contexts.org shows the quote "Reflecting widely held ideologies back to the public would no doubt raise trust in academia, but this is not our mandate."
New! From @michaelbriscoe.bsky.social, a response to Eppard and Mackey's @contexts.org piece on liberal bias in academia: "A Closer Look at Ideology *and* Truth on Campus"
contexts.org/blog/a-closer-look
#sociology #highereducation #liberalbias
@caroljadams.bsky.social
What does this mean? Broader structural forces move the CIWB but presidential party does matter. Democrats do a bit better than Republicans at reducing CIWB but both parties need to do more to lower carbon emissions while improving human well-being.
The results of autoregressive distributed lag models from 1960-2023 show that shifts from a Republican to a Democrat president are associated with a 1% reduction in CIWB one year later, but I did not find evidence of long-run effects based on political party.
Critical perspectives argue that Democrats and Republicans are similar in upholding the status quo, neither making significant moves when it comes to the environment or human well-being. Others argue there are significant differences in how each party affects the environment and human well-being.
The CIWB is a ratio of carbon emissions to life expectancy - a measure of environmental stress needed to produce human well-being.
A lower CIWB is therefore a desirable outcome in terms of sustainability.
I published a new paper in Sustainability: Science, Practice, and Policy on presidential politics and the carbon intensity of well-being in the US.
doi.org/10.1080/1548...
And the schools are only hiring specific kinds of music teachers. Piano specialty? Already got one of those. We're looking for someone who can play and teach violin.
ASA’s TRAILS is a peer-reviewed digital teaching resources library that’s free to ASA members. Check out the Crime and Criminology Resource Collection, featuring syllabi for courses on green criminology, sociology of murder, mass shootings, and more. https://bit.ly/40TkJee
💯
Felt inspired by your post and made an interactive graphic on Tableau Public showing cost of doing business and quality of life and the trend line.
public.tableau.com/views/CNBC20...
I write about these bad faith animal welfare arguments against renewable energy in chapter 4 of my new book. Fossil fuel production kills many more animals both directly and indirectly than renewables. At the same time, we can do more to reduce the impact of renewable energy production on animals.
It is tempting to visit animal "wildlife centers" or "sanctuaries" that offer you the chance to get close to animals. The problem is many of these organizations are actually roadside zoos more concerned with profit than animal welfare.
Read more in my new piece for @speciesunite.bsky.social
This sale is on just about everything including my new book, Stocks or Stakeholders. Use code DGBSUMMER25
brill.com/display/titl...
@dgb-philosophy.bsky.social
This is a work in progress as I continue to learn Tableau and the most effective ways to communicate this concept.
But the adjusted CIWB measure is perhaps easier to understand and use to set goals - something I discuss with my coauthors in our recent paper in Environmental Sociology (linked).
This visualization helps provide the tools to set those goals and see how countries have progressed since 1970.
The visualizations include unadjusted and adjusted measures of the carbon intensity of well-being. Adjusted measures are typically used in environmental sociological analyses because they help account for the different scales of carbon emissions and life expectancy.
This interactive visualization includes maps and line graphs of the carbon intensity of well-being for almost every country on earth from the years 1970-2023 (you can use the drop down menu to select countries, and sliders to view years on maps).
The data come from the World Bank.
I think the carbon intensity of well-being is one of the most useful sustainability measures. What's more important than reducing environmental impact and improving human well-being?
Being able to explore and interact with this measure helps people understand it. I've made a dashboard to do so -
This suggests the importance of moving beyond merely criminalizing bird hunting. In this region of Iran, at least, fostering social norms against illegal hunting is an important step to address this problem.