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Corey Lee Wrenn, Ph.D.

Vegan Feminist Sociologist, Writer, and Activist

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Author: Dr. Corey Wrenn

The Social Psychology of Veganism – Gendered Helping

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 23, 2017October 5, 2018
Social psychology finds that social norms will determine helping behaviors, but social norms certainly vary across genders in Western society. Dangerous situations or those involving strangers are more likely to elicit help from men thanContinue reading
Essays

The Social Psychology of Veganism – Haste

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 22, 2017October 5, 2018
Whether or not an individual is in a hurry will determine their likelihood of helping. In one study, Darley and Batson (1973) presented an experimental group with a lecture on the importance of being aContinue reading
Essays

The Social Psychology of Veganism – In-group Bias

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 21, 2017October 5, 2018
In-group bias refers to "us" versus "them" group mentality that predominates in human societies. Occupying an in-group is important for self esteem, identity, community, and safety. Just as individuals favor themselves, they tend to favorContinue reading
Essays

The Social Psychology of Veganism – Social Responsibility Norm

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 20, 2017October 16, 2018
The norm of social responsibility finds that people will help even when there is no expectation of reciprocation and even when that help remains anonymous. There are two stipulations, however. First, the person or groupContinue reading
Essays

The Social Psychology of Veganism – Reciprocity Norm

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 17, 2017October 12, 2018
The reciprocity norm suggests that people are likely to help those who have helped them in the past.  The feeling of reciprocity can be increased if the relationship is a sustained one, and, it canContinue reading
Essays

The Social Psychology of Veganism – Door-in-the-Face

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 16, 2017October 2, 2018
The door-in-the-face phenomenon suggests that, if one makes an over-the-top request that is likely to be denied and then counters with a more reasonable request, audiences will be much more likely to agree to theContinue reading
Essays

The Social Psychology of Veganism – Just-World Phenomenon

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 15, 2017October 12, 2018
The just-world phenomenon asserts that people, to protect their peace of mind, tend to believe that bad things happen only to those who deserve it. This phenomenon surfaced in Nazi Germany where Jews were blamedContinue reading
Essays

The Social Psychology of Veganism – Selective Exposure

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 14, 2017October 16, 2018
Frustrated activists often lament that audiences simply do not want to listen to them. "I just don't want to know!" is a commonly-heard refrain. They will not be surprised to learn that social psychology supportsContinue reading
Essays

The Social Psychology of Veganism – Opinion Leaders

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 13, 2017October 12, 2018
Social psychological research on the absorption of media indicates that media frequently operates in a two-step flow. Media first hits opinion leaders and then disseminates to friends, family, colleagues, and others. Messages become popular as they are filtered throughContinue reading
Essays

The Social Psychology of Veganism – Dissemination Channels

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 10, 2017September 22, 2018
A message can be broadcast by face-to-face contact, video, audio, or written word. With so many options, which is the most effective? It depends. Speaking with audiences in person seems to be the most effectiveContinue reading
Essays

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Dr. Wrenn is Senior Lecturer of Sociology with the School of Social Sciences and Co-Director of the Centre for the Study of Social and Political Movements at the University of Kent. She received her Ph.D. in Sociology with Colorado State University in 2016. She was awarded Exemplary Diversity Scholar, 2016 by the University of Michigan’s National Center for Institutional Diversity. She served as council member with the American Sociological Association’s Animals & Society section (2013-2016), was elected Chair in 2018, and co-founded the International Association of Vegan Sociologists in 2020. She serves as Book Review Editor for Society & Animals, Consulting Editor for Psychology of Human-Animal Intergroup Relations, and past Editor for The Sociological Quarterly, is a member of The Vegan Society’s Research Advisory Committee, and hosts Sociology & Animals Podcast. She is the author of A Rational Approach to Animal Rights: Extensions in Abolitionist Theory (Palgrave MacMillan 2016), Piecemeal Protest: Animal Rights in the Age of Nonprofits (University of Michigan Press 2019), Animals in Irish Society (SUNY Press 2021), Vegan Witchcraft: Contemporary Magical Practice and Multispecies Social Change (forthcoming, Routledge, and Vegan Feminism: History, Theory, Activism (forthcoming, Bloomsbury).

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