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Energy Research and Social Science, Volume 25, March 2017

Perspectives
1.) Beyond broken pumps and promises: Rethinking intent and impact in environmental health. --Evan A. Thomas.
2.) Data for development: The case for an Indian energy information administration. --Varun Rai, Rahul Tongia, Gireesh Shrimali, Nikit Abhyankar.

Social science and energy studies
3.) The reality of cross-disciplinary energy research in the United Kingdom: A social science perspective. --B. Mallaband, G. Wood, K. Buchanan, S. Staddon, ... E. Gabe-Thomas.

The acceptance of energy systems
4.) Spoiled darkness? Sense of place and annoyance over obstruction lights from the world’s largest wind turbine test centre in Denmark. --David Rudolph, Julia Kirkegaard, Ivar Lyhne, Niels-Erik Clausen, Lone Kørnøv.
5.) Between the technology acceptance model and sustainable energy technology acceptance model: Investigating smart meter acceptance in the United States. --Chien-fei Chen, Xiaojing Xu, Laura Arpan.

Energy, consumption, and behavior
6.) Users, design and the role of feedback technologies in the Norwegian energy transition: An empirical study and some radical challenges. --Tomas Moe Skjølsvold, Susanne Jørgensen, Marianne Ryghaug.
7.) Understanding the timing of energy demand through time use data: Time of the day dependence of social practices. --Jacopo Torriti.
8.) Scripting, control, and privacy in domestic smart grid technologies: Insights from a Danish pilot study. --Meiken Hansen, Bettina Hauge.
9.) Explaining interest in adopting residential solar photovoltaic systems in the United States: Toward an integration of behavioral theories. --Kimberly S. Wolske, Paul C. Stern, Thomas Dietz.

Energy institutions and governance
10.) Is there a Nordic model of final disposal of spent nuclear fuel? Governance insights from Finland and Sweden. --Tapio Litmanen, Mika Kari, Matti Kojo, Barry D. Solomon.

Energy transitions
11.) Climate change and cities: problem structuring methods and critical perspectives on low-carbon districts. --Rachel Freeman, Mike Yearworth.

Energy education and knowledge
12.) Bioenergy experts and their imagined “obligatory publics” in the United States: Implications for public engagement and participation. --Weston M. Eaton, Morey Burnham, C. Clare Hinrichs, Theresa Selfa.
13.) Knowing where to go: The knowledge foundation for investments in renewable energy. --Jesper Lindgaard Christensen, Daniel S. Hain.

Book review
14.) V. Andrei, Belyi Transnational Gas Markets and Euro-Russian Energy Relations, Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. --Dimitar Bechev.
15.) Nylon and Bombs: DuPont and the March of Modern America by P. A. Ndiaye, translated by Elborg Forster. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2007). --Alberto D. Mendoza España.
16.) The Renewable Energy Landscape: Preserving Scenic Values in our Sustainable Future, D. Apostol, J. Palmer, M. Pasqualetti, R. Smardon, R. Sullivan (Eds.). Routledge, New York, NY (2016). --Maria A. Petrova.
17.) “Energy Return on Investment: A Unifying Principle for Biology, Economics, and Sustainability”, Charles A.S. Hall. Lecture Notes in Energy, Volume 26. Springer, Switzerland (2017). --Michael Jefferson.
18.) America’s Grid: Past and Uncertain Future, Gretchen Bakke. A Review of “The Grid: The Fraying Wires Between Americans and Our Energy Future”, Bloomsbury, New York (2016). --Randy Clifford Kritkausky.
Skjølsvold, Tomas Moe - Personal Name
Freeman, Rachel - Personal Name
Litmanen, Tapio - Personal Name
Wolske, Kimberly S. - Personal Name
Hansen, Meiken - Personal Name
Torriti, Jacopo - Personal Name
Rudolph, David - Personal Name
Mallaband, B. - Personal Name
Rai, Varun - Personal Name
Thomas, Evan A. - Personal Name
Chen, Chien-fei - Personal Name
Eaton, Weston M. - Personal Name
Volume 25, March 2017
2214-6296
e-Journal PHI
Inggris
Elsevier Ltd.
2017
United Kingdom
152 hlm
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