Energy Research and Social Science, Volume 29, July 2017
Perspectives
1.) What makes an effective energy efficiency label? Assessing the performance of energy labels through eye-tracking experiments in Ireland. --William Brazil, Brian Caulfield.
2.) Saving innovative climate and energy research: Four recommendations for Mission Innovation. --Daniel L. Sanchez, Varun Sivaram.
3.) Confected conflict in the wake of the South Australian blackout: Diversionary strategies and policy failure in Australia's energy sector. --Adam Lucas.
The acceptance of energy systems
4.) A drill by any other name: Social representations, framing, and legacies of natural resource extraction in the fracking industry. --Dylan Bugden, Darrick Evensen, Richard Stedman.
5.) Changing Tides: Acceptability, support, and perceptions of tidal energy in the United States. --Stacia J. Dreyer, Hilary Jacqueline Polis, Lekelia Danielle Jenkins.
6.) The Muillean Gaoithe and the Melin Wynt: Cultural sustainability and community owned wind energy schemes in Gaelic and Welsh speaking communities in the United Kingdom. --Sioned Haf, Karen Parkhill.
7.) Thirty years of North American wind energy acceptance research: What have we learned?. --Joseph Rand, Ben Hoen.
Energy, consumption, and behavior
8.) Understanding comfort and senses in social practice theory: Insights from a Danish field study. --Line Valdorff Madsen, Kirsten Gram-Hanssen.
9.) Gaming for Earth: Serious games and gamification to engage consumers in pro-environmental behaviours for energy efficiency. --Luca Morganti, Federica Pallavicini, Elena Cadel, Antonio Candelieri, Fabrizia Mantovani.
Energy politics and national profiles
10.) Perceived risks, emotions, and policy preferences: A longitudinal survey among the local population on gas quakes in the Netherlands. --Goda Perlaviciute, Linda Steg, Elisabeth J. Hoekstra, Leonie Vrieling.
11.) A very public mess: Problematizing the “participative turn” in energy policy in Chile. --Sebastián Ureta.
Energy institutions and governance
12.) Is reporting “significant damage” transparent? Assessing fire and explosion risk at oil and gas operations in the United States. --Benjamin D. Blair, Lisa M. McKenzie, William B. Allshouse, John L. Adgate.
Energy transitions
13.) A new regime and then what? Cracks and tensions in the socio-technical regime of the Swedish heat energy system. --Adis Dzebo, Björn Nykvist.
Energy equity and justice
14.) Advancing an energy justice perspective of fuel poverty: Household vulnerability and domestic retrofit policy in the United Kingdom. --Ross Gillard, Carolyn Snell, Mark Bevan.
15.) Procedural justice in Canadian wind energy development: A comparison of community-based and technocratic siting processes. --Chad Walker, Jamie Baxter
Purchase PDFArticle preview.
16.) Testing Diffusion of Innovations Theory with data: Financial incentives, early adopters, and distributed solar energy in Australia. --Genevieve Simpson, Julian Clifton.
Energy education and knowledge
17.) Transforming knowledge for sustainability: Insights from an inclusive science-practice dialogue on low-carbon society in Germany. --Anna Ernst, Andrea Fischer-Hotzel, Diana Schumann.
Book reviews
18.) A Handbook of Primary Commodities in the Global Economy, 2nd edition, Marian Radetzki, Linda Wårell. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK (2016). --Roberto F. Aguilera.
19.) Peak Oil: Apocalyptic Environmentalism and Libertarian Political Culture, Matthew Schneider-Mayerson. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London (2015). --Corrie Grosse.
1.) What makes an effective energy efficiency label? Assessing the performance of energy labels through eye-tracking experiments in Ireland. --William Brazil, Brian Caulfield.
2.) Saving innovative climate and energy research: Four recommendations for Mission Innovation. --Daniel L. Sanchez, Varun Sivaram.
3.) Confected conflict in the wake of the South Australian blackout: Diversionary strategies and policy failure in Australia's energy sector. --Adam Lucas.
The acceptance of energy systems
4.) A drill by any other name: Social representations, framing, and legacies of natural resource extraction in the fracking industry. --Dylan Bugden, Darrick Evensen, Richard Stedman.
5.) Changing Tides: Acceptability, support, and perceptions of tidal energy in the United States. --Stacia J. Dreyer, Hilary Jacqueline Polis, Lekelia Danielle Jenkins.
6.) The Muillean Gaoithe and the Melin Wynt: Cultural sustainability and community owned wind energy schemes in Gaelic and Welsh speaking communities in the United Kingdom. --Sioned Haf, Karen Parkhill.
7.) Thirty years of North American wind energy acceptance research: What have we learned?. --Joseph Rand, Ben Hoen.
Energy, consumption, and behavior
8.) Understanding comfort and senses in social practice theory: Insights from a Danish field study. --Line Valdorff Madsen, Kirsten Gram-Hanssen.
9.) Gaming for Earth: Serious games and gamification to engage consumers in pro-environmental behaviours for energy efficiency. --Luca Morganti, Federica Pallavicini, Elena Cadel, Antonio Candelieri, Fabrizia Mantovani.
Energy politics and national profiles
10.) Perceived risks, emotions, and policy preferences: A longitudinal survey among the local population on gas quakes in the Netherlands. --Goda Perlaviciute, Linda Steg, Elisabeth J. Hoekstra, Leonie Vrieling.
11.) A very public mess: Problematizing the “participative turn” in energy policy in Chile. --Sebastián Ureta.
Energy institutions and governance
12.) Is reporting “significant damage” transparent? Assessing fire and explosion risk at oil and gas operations in the United States. --Benjamin D. Blair, Lisa M. McKenzie, William B. Allshouse, John L. Adgate.
Energy transitions
13.) A new regime and then what? Cracks and tensions in the socio-technical regime of the Swedish heat energy system. --Adis Dzebo, Björn Nykvist.
Energy equity and justice
14.) Advancing an energy justice perspective of fuel poverty: Household vulnerability and domestic retrofit policy in the United Kingdom. --Ross Gillard, Carolyn Snell, Mark Bevan.
15.) Procedural justice in Canadian wind energy development: A comparison of community-based and technocratic siting processes. --Chad Walker, Jamie Baxter
Purchase PDFArticle preview.
16.) Testing Diffusion of Innovations Theory with data: Financial incentives, early adopters, and distributed solar energy in Australia. --Genevieve Simpson, Julian Clifton.
Energy education and knowledge
17.) Transforming knowledge for sustainability: Insights from an inclusive science-practice dialogue on low-carbon society in Germany. --Anna Ernst, Andrea Fischer-Hotzel, Diana Schumann.
Book reviews
18.) A Handbook of Primary Commodities in the Global Economy, 2nd edition, Marian Radetzki, Linda Wårell. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK (2016). --Roberto F. Aguilera.
19.) Peak Oil: Apocalyptic Environmentalism and Libertarian Political Culture, Matthew Schneider-Mayerson. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London (2015). --Corrie Grosse.
Perlaviciute, Goda - Personal Name
Morganti, Luca - Personal Name
Madsen, Line Valdorff - Personal Name
Rand, Joseph - Personal Name
Haf, Sioned - Personal Name
Dreyer, Stacia J. - Personal Name
Bugden, Dylan - Personal Name
Lucas, Adam - Personal Name
Sanchez, Daniel L. - Personal Name
Brazil, William - Personal Name
Ureta, Sebastián - Personal Name
Morganti, Luca - Personal Name
Madsen, Line Valdorff - Personal Name
Rand, Joseph - Personal Name
Haf, Sioned - Personal Name
Dreyer, Stacia J. - Personal Name
Bugden, Dylan - Personal Name
Lucas, Adam - Personal Name
Sanchez, Daniel L. - Personal Name
Brazil, William - Personal Name
Ureta, Sebastián - Personal Name
Volume 29, July 2017
2214-6296
e-Journal PHI
Inggris
Elsevier Ltd.
2017
United Kingdom
170 hlm
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