Energy Research and Social Science, Volume 23, January 2017
Perspectives
1.) Is OPEC dead? Oil exporters, the Paris agreement and the transition to a post-carbon world. --Thijs Van de Graaf.
Social science and energy studies
2.) Network management and renewable energy development: An analytical framework with empirical illustrations. --David Newell, Annica Sandström, Patrik Söderholm.
The acceptance of energy systems
3.) The influence of high-voltage power lines on the feelings evoked by different Swiss surroundings. --Pascal Lienert, Bernadette Sütterlin, Michael Siegrist.
4.) Household dynamics of technology adoption: A spatial econometric analysis of residential solar photovoltaic (PV) systems in Germany. --Samdruk Dharshing.
5.) Stakeholder empowerment through participatory planning practices: The case of electricity transmission lines in France and Norway. --Leonhard Späth, Anna Scolobig.
Energy, consumption, and behavior
6.) Are consumers willing to switch to smart time of use electricity tariffs? The importance of loss-aversion and electric vehicle ownership. --Moira Nicolson, Gesche Huebner, David Shipworth.
7.) Energy use behaviors in buildings: Towards an integrated conceptual framework. --Da Li, Carol C. Menassa, Aslihan Karatas.
Energy politics and national profiles
8.) The political economy of technical fixes: The (mis)alignment of clean fossil and political regimes. --Nils Markusson, Mads Dahl Gjefsen, Jennie C. Stephens, David Tyfield.
9.) Policy packaging or policy patching? The development of complex energy efficiency policy mixes. --F. Kern, P. Kivimaa, M. Martiskainen.
10.) When decarbonization meets development: The sectoral feasibility of greenhouse gas mitigation in India. --Joshua W. Busby, Sarang Shidore.
11.) Education, political affiliation and energy policy in the United States: A case of Tea Party exceptionalism?. --Adam Mayer, E. Keith Smith.
12.) The discursive politics of unconventional gas in Scotland: Drifting towards precaution?. --Hannes R. Stephan.
Energy institutions and governance
13.) A transformational paradigm for marine renewable energy development. --Marcello Graziano, Suzannah-Lynn Billing, Jasper O. Kenter, Lucy Greenhill.
14.) Institutional ‘lock-out’ towards local self-governance? Environmental justice and sustainable transformations in Dutch social housing neighbourhoods. --S. Breukers, R.M. Mourik, L.F.M. van Summeren, G.P.J. Verbong.
15.) Energy transitions, sub-national government and regime flexibility: How has devolution in the United Kingdom affected renewable energy development?. --Richard Cowell, Geraint Ellis, Fionnguala Sherry-Brennan, Peter A. Strachan, David Toke.
Energy innovation and research
16.) A state of fracking: Building Poland’s national innovation capacity for shale gas. --Michael LaBelle.
17.) A fuel too far? Technology, innovation, and transition in failed biofuel development in Norway. --Arne Martin Fevolden, Antje Klitkou.
Content analyses and media representations
18.) Homes as machines: Exploring expert and public imaginaries of low carbon housing futures in the United Kingdom. --C. Cherry, C. Hopfe, B. MacGillivray, N. Pidgeon.
1.) Is OPEC dead? Oil exporters, the Paris agreement and the transition to a post-carbon world. --Thijs Van de Graaf.
Social science and energy studies
2.) Network management and renewable energy development: An analytical framework with empirical illustrations. --David Newell, Annica Sandström, Patrik Söderholm.
The acceptance of energy systems
3.) The influence of high-voltage power lines on the feelings evoked by different Swiss surroundings. --Pascal Lienert, Bernadette Sütterlin, Michael Siegrist.
4.) Household dynamics of technology adoption: A spatial econometric analysis of residential solar photovoltaic (PV) systems in Germany. --Samdruk Dharshing.
5.) Stakeholder empowerment through participatory planning practices: The case of electricity transmission lines in France and Norway. --Leonhard Späth, Anna Scolobig.
Energy, consumption, and behavior
6.) Are consumers willing to switch to smart time of use electricity tariffs? The importance of loss-aversion and electric vehicle ownership. --Moira Nicolson, Gesche Huebner, David Shipworth.
7.) Energy use behaviors in buildings: Towards an integrated conceptual framework. --Da Li, Carol C. Menassa, Aslihan Karatas.
Energy politics and national profiles
8.) The political economy of technical fixes: The (mis)alignment of clean fossil and political regimes. --Nils Markusson, Mads Dahl Gjefsen, Jennie C. Stephens, David Tyfield.
9.) Policy packaging or policy patching? The development of complex energy efficiency policy mixes. --F. Kern, P. Kivimaa, M. Martiskainen.
10.) When decarbonization meets development: The sectoral feasibility of greenhouse gas mitigation in India. --Joshua W. Busby, Sarang Shidore.
11.) Education, political affiliation and energy policy in the United States: A case of Tea Party exceptionalism?. --Adam Mayer, E. Keith Smith.
12.) The discursive politics of unconventional gas in Scotland: Drifting towards precaution?. --Hannes R. Stephan.
Energy institutions and governance
13.) A transformational paradigm for marine renewable energy development. --Marcello Graziano, Suzannah-Lynn Billing, Jasper O. Kenter, Lucy Greenhill.
14.) Institutional ‘lock-out’ towards local self-governance? Environmental justice and sustainable transformations in Dutch social housing neighbourhoods. --S. Breukers, R.M. Mourik, L.F.M. van Summeren, G.P.J. Verbong.
15.) Energy transitions, sub-national government and regime flexibility: How has devolution in the United Kingdom affected renewable energy development?. --Richard Cowell, Geraint Ellis, Fionnguala Sherry-Brennan, Peter A. Strachan, David Toke.
Energy innovation and research
16.) A state of fracking: Building Poland’s national innovation capacity for shale gas. --Michael LaBelle.
17.) A fuel too far? Technology, innovation, and transition in failed biofuel development in Norway. --Arne Martin Fevolden, Antje Klitkou.
Content analyses and media representations
18.) Homes as machines: Exploring expert and public imaginaries of low carbon housing futures in the United Kingdom. --C. Cherry, C. Hopfe, B. MacGillivray, N. Pidgeon.
Graaf, Thijs Van de - Personal Name
Stephan, Hannes R. - Personal Name
Mayer, Adam - Personal Name
Busby, Joshua W. - Personal Name
Kern, F. - Personal Name
Markusson, Nils - Personal Name
Da Li - Personal Name
Nicolson, Moira - Personal Name
Späth, Leonhard - Personal Name
Dharshing, Samdruk - Personal Name
Lienert, Pascal - Personal Name
Newell, David - Personal Name
Graziano, Marcello - Personal Name
Stephan, Hannes R. - Personal Name
Mayer, Adam - Personal Name
Busby, Joshua W. - Personal Name
Kern, F. - Personal Name
Markusson, Nils - Personal Name
Da Li - Personal Name
Nicolson, Moira - Personal Name
Späth, Leonhard - Personal Name
Dharshing, Samdruk - Personal Name
Lienert, Pascal - Personal Name
Newell, David - Personal Name
Graziano, Marcello - Personal Name
Volume 23, January 2017
2214-6296
e-Journal PHI
Inggris
Elsevier Ltd.
2017
United Kingdom
210 hlm
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