MEet Animetrics

Better evidence. Stronger advocacy.

Animetrics builds the evidence and strategy infrastructure animal advocates need to create change in regions too often overlooked

The Challenge

  • Black and white photo of Holstein cows grazing in a field with farm buildings in the background.

    Weak Strategic Decision-Making

    Animal advocacy operates under severe resource constraints while the scale of suffering continues to grow. Without stronger use of evidence, economics, and strategic prioritization, organizations risk spending limited time and funding on interventions that are unlikely to create meaningful impact.

    Better evidence helps advocacy focus resources where they can do the most good.

  • Culturally Grounded

    Lack of Local Evidence in High-Need Regions

    Over 70% of the world’s farmed animals are raised in the Global South, yet less than 20% of advocacy funding goes to these regions. Much of the evidence guiding animal advocacy still comes from Western contexts, despite major differences in culture, religion, institutions, and economic conditions—meaning strategies that work in one context may be ineffective or even backfire in another.

    Locally relevant evidence is crucial for effective advocacy.

  • A rabbit cuddling with a fluffy chick on a bed of straw.

    Research Alone Isn't Enough

    Research alone rarely changes outcomes. Findings are often too technical, disconnected from advocacy realities, or difficult to apply in practice, while many organizations lack the time, systems, or capacity to turn research into practical action.

    Research matters when it helps people make better decisions.

What our work enables

Our work helps advocacy organizations, researchers, funders, and institutions make more informed and context-sensitive decisions.

Explore our services to learn how we can collaborate.

  • We help you understand the most important problems and opportunities in your context.

  • We generate and synthesize evidence to identify strategies that are effective, feasible, and scalable.

  • We provide evidence and analysis to strengthen policy, corporate, and strategic decisions.

  • Because we come from Global South and Muslim-majority contexts ourselves, we understand the importance of cultural, institutional, religious, and economic realities. We ground our research in these contexts so findings are relevant, credible, and actionable.

  • We strengthen your team's research, evaluation, and strategy skills for lasting impact.

How we think?

  • Over 70% of the world’s farmed animals are raised in the Global South, yet less than 20% of movement funding goes to these regions. At the same time, meat, poultry, dairy, and fish production are expanding rapidly across many lower- and middle-income countries, meaning decisions made in these regions over the coming decades may shape the welfare conditions of billions of animals.

    A major focus of our work is halal food systems — food systems shaped by Islamic dietary rules that influence how animals are raised, handled, transported, and slaughtered for nearly two billion Muslim consumers worldwide. The halal sector is already one of the largest and fastest-growing parts of the global food economy, projected to grow from over $7 trillion today to around $10 trillion by 2030.

    Despite this scale, Muslim-majority contexts and halal systems remain significantly underrepresented in animal advocacy research. Without locally grounded evidence, organizations risk relying on strategies developed in very different cultural and institutional environments. We aim to help close this gap by producing decision-relevant research that organizations can use to improve advocacy, policy engagement, and welfare outcomes in these high-impact contexts.

  • We focus on helping organizations make better decisions in some of the most overlooked but high-impact areas in animal advocacy.

    • Neglected, high-impact focus. We specialize in Global South and halal food systems — areas still largely overlooked in animal advocacy.

    • Filling a key gap. Few organizations combine economic rigor with deep regional and cultural expertise in these contexts.

    • Strong methodological expertise. Our team includes PhD economists from Muslim-majority countries with backgrounds in causal inference, behavioral research, and impact evaluation.

    • Implementation-first approach. We design research for real-world advocacy use — not just publication.

    • Validated by demand. Organizations across regions actively seek out and apply our work.

  • A major problem in animal advocacy is that research often gets published but never meaningfully applied. We try to address this by designing projects around real strategic needs from the beginning, rather than producing research in isolation.

    Much of our work is developed directly with advocacy organizations facing concrete questions related to campaigns, policy, messaging, or institutional change. We also stay involved after publication — helping partners translate findings into advocacy strategy, stakeholder communication, workshops, and implementation planning.

    Our goal is not simply to produce reports, but to generate evidence that organizations can realistically use to make better decisions in practice.

  • Animal advocacy operates under limited time, funding, and organizational capacity, which makes prioritization especially important. Economics and impact evaluation help us understand which interventions are most likely to create meaningful change for animals, which strategies are cost-effective, and where limited resources can have the greatest impact.

    A key part of this work is distinguishing correlation from causation. For example, if public attitudes appear to change after a campaign, we want to understand whether the campaign actually caused that change or whether other factors were responsible. Methods such as experiments, behavioral research, and impact evaluation help organizations make more informed decisions based on evidence rather than assumptions alone.

  • Our approach is based on understanding the local context. What works in London or New York can fail — or even backfire — in places like Istanbul or Jakarta, as behavior is shaped by different cultural, religious, and institutional realities. Advocacy strategies that work well in one setting do not automatically translate to another. Behavior is shaped by different cultural norms, religious values, political environments, economic realities, and sources of trust. For example, highly confrontational campaigns or messaging centered around individual identity may resonate in some Western contexts but create resistance in places where religious legitimacy, social harmony, or community reputation play a larger role in decision-making.

    Institutional structures also differ significantly across regions. In many Muslim-majority contexts, actors such as halal certification bodies, religious scholars, and local community leaders can strongly influence public attitudes and policy discussions in ways that have no direct equivalent in many Western advocacy environments. Without locally grounded evidence, organizations risk relying on strategies that are ineffective, poorly targeted, or perceived as culturally disconnected, making meaningful engagement and long-term change more difficult.

How do we create change?

Animetrics exists to help the animal advocacy movement make better decisions in under-researched and culturally complex contexts, particularly in the Global South and Muslim-majority regions.

Our theory of change is simple: better local evidence and stronger research uptake lead to better advocacy decisions. We combine economic research, local expertise, and close collaboration with advocates to conduct demand-driven studies, impact evaluations, and implementation support. This produces locally grounded evidence, practical recommendations, and strategy tools organizations can actually use. In the short term, that helps advocates make more informed decisions and avoid ineffective approaches. In the long term, we aim to strengthen institutional and behavioral change for animals in neglected but high-impact regions.

Alongside research, we provide free implementation and capacity-building support to help organizations strengthen their internal research and evaluation skills. By reducing barriers to high-quality evidence and strategic support, we aim to improve the effectiveness, coordination, and long-term impact of animal advocacy efforts. Ultimately, we hope this contributes to stronger institutional change, more effective advocacy, and reduced animal suffering at scale.

We recognize that our impact is often indirect, manifesting through the successes and advancements of the organizations, advocates, and broader communities we support. To ensure we're making the desired difference and to continuously refine our approach, we employ a combination of quantitative and qualitative metrics to assess our reach and influence.

  • Quantitative Measures:

    • Report downloads, citations, and website engagement

    • Workshop participation and training outcomes

    • Number of partnerships and implementation projects

    • Repeat collaborations and organizational demand

    • Evidence of research use in campaigns, policy work, or strategy

  • Qualitative Measures:

    • Stakeholder feedback from collaborating organizations

    • Follow-up interviews and implementation examples

    • Evidence of stronger evidence-based decision-making

    • More culturally grounded advocacy strategies

    • Increased visibility of neglected regions and issues within the movement

Our Story

Our story began at Boğaziçi University in Türkiye, where we both studied economics. Years later, we ended up in the same PhD program at Tilburg University in the Netherlands — eventually becoming close friends and housemates as well as colleagues.

Over time, many of our conversations started circling around shared questions about justice, ethics, and social change. What began as a strong feminist solidarity gradually expanded into broader discussions about non-human animals, food systems, and neglected forms of suffering. Eventually, we both became vegan, motivated by ethical, environmental, and social concerns.

As economists, we also became increasingly aware of how little rigorous quantitative and behavioral research existed in many areas of animal advocacy — especially in underrepresented regions and culturally complex contexts. We saw major strategic decisions often being made with limited local evidence, little evaluation, and few researchers working from within these regions themselves.

Later, through work with Vegan Hacktivists and other advocacy organizations, we became more involved in understanding how research, data, and technology could strengthen the movement. That experience reinforced something we already felt strongly: better evidence alone is not enough. Research also needs to be practical, collaborative, and connected to real advocacy needs.

Animetrics emerged from these experiences. The name reflects the intersection of animals and econometrics, but more broadly, it represents our belief that animal advocacy can become more effective through stronger research, better decision-making, and deeper engagement with local realities.

Today, our work focuses on helping organizations make more informed decisions through research, impact evaluation, implementation support, and capacity building — particularly in neglected but high-impact regions, including Muslim-majority contexts and the Global South.