Artigo em revista científica
The institutional food sustainability gap in higher education: A case study-informed framework supporting food system transitions
Nan Zou (Zou, N.); Ana Maria Herrero-Langreo (Herrero-Langreo, A. M.); Rui Pedro Fonseca (Fonseca, R. P.); Camila Augusto Perussello (Perussello, C. A.);
Título Revista
Sustainability
Ano (publicação definitiva)
2026
Língua
Inglês
País
Suíça
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Abstract/Resumo
Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) are vital leverage points for climate action, yet the role of campus food environments in supporting these commitments is rarely assessed. This mixed-methods diagnostic study examined the food environment, sustainability literacy, behavioural barriers, and reported preferences regarding plant-based eating at a major European university. Across 29 campus canteens, plant-based meals accounted for only 17.2% of menu options and less than 1% of actual meal volume, with substantial inconsistency in availability and labelling across weekdays and canteens. Student survey findings (n = 198) revealed low food sustainability literacy: 64.7% of participants failed the assessment, particularly males (78.1%) and omnivores (75.7%). Among omnivore respondents, the most frequent barriers to adopting plant-based diets were ideological resistance, nutrition concerns, palatability, convenience, and cost. Students most strongly endorsed improved taste, more options (70.2%), and lower prices (62.1%) as strategies to encourage plant-based choices. Taken together, these findings highlight a structural implementation gap between institutional sustainability commitments and the campus food environment. They underscore the need for targeted interventions to improve food sustainability literacy and to increase the availability and attractiveness of plant-based options required for climate mitigation. To address this systemic challenge, this paper proposes a scalable HEI Food Transition Framework, informed by the results, that integrates choice architecture, curricular reform, inclusive provisioning, and data-driven accountability, offering a strategic pathway to align campus food environments with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
Agradecimentos/Acknowledgements
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Palavras-chave
Higher education institutions,Food sustainability,Plant-based diets,Sustainability literacy,Dietary change,Food transition framework,ADKAR

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