Meike Janssen
Associate Professor
Om
I look for ways to accelerate the green consumer transition
My research focuses on consumer behaviour in the field of sustainable consumption, in particular food consumption. I am interested in marketing instruments and policy interventions for fostering sustainable consumption, e.g. choice architecture, product labelling, and third-party certification. My expertise covers various food-related topics, especially plant-based food and reduced meat consumption, organic food, local food, healthy eating, animal welfare standards, and sustainable food packaging.
Publications
See all publicationsdecember 2025
Pasture Grazing, Animal Welfare, and Biodiversity
A Latent Class Analysis of German Consumers’ Preferences for Beef and Milk
Go to publicationjuni 2025
Consumer Preferences for Organic, Animal Welfare-friendly, and Locally Produced Meat in Workplace Canteens
Results of a Discrete Choice Experiment in Germany
Go to publicationjuni 2024
How to Move the Transition to Sustainable Food Consumption Towards a Societal Tipping Point
Meike Janssen, Associate Professor
Jessica Aschemann-Witzel
Recent research projects
PlantTip - Modelling societal transitions and tipping points for the green transition of food consumption
The aim of PlantTip is to experiment and predict how policy instruments, marketing measures, consumer-oriented innovations, and social dynamics can be combined to trigger societal tipping points. The project employs an innovative approach of developing (a) agent-based models based on (b) social-behavioural experimentation data.
Large-scale and accelerated dietary change could crucially contribute to GHG emission reduction in Denmark. However, the current rate of change towards more sustainable diets is far too slow and restricted to niches. Societal tipping points must be reached to accelerate the needed changes, but we lack knowledge on how to predict and foster large scale behaviour change.
Current approaches overemphasise solutions that change food, but not the food-eaters. We argue that a complex systems change is necessary, which this project initiates, by identifying actionable insights about instruments, innovations and social dynamics that can trigger societal tipping points.
PlantTip is a joint project of Copenhagen Business School, Aarhus University and Democracy X, and collaborates with, amongst others, the Stockholm Resilience Centre and the chair of International Political Economy and Environmental Politics, ETH Zurich.
EU-project VISIONARY - Food Provision through Sustainable Farming Systems and Value Chains
I lead the work package on ‘Value chain initiatives and business models’ and I am responsible for generating consumer insights on how to promote food from sustainable, climate-neutral and biodiversity-friendly farming systems.
The 4-year project is funded with 23 mio. DKK (CBS share 2.2 mio. DKK) and involves partners from 8 European countries.