Advanced Search

  • SEARCHING...
  • SEARCHING...

Detail Record


XML

Energy Research and Social Science, Volume 31, September 2017

1.) Using stories, narratives, and storytelling in energy and climate change research. --Mithra Moezzi, Kathryn B. Janda, Sea Rotmann.

Stories as Data
Stories as Companions to Quantitative Assessments
2.) Oh behave! Survey stories and lessons learned from building occupants in high-performance buildings. --Julia K. Day, William O'Brien.
3.) Documenting fuel poverty from the householders’ perspective. --Ronald Mould, Keith J. Baker.
4.) Post-conventional energy futures: Rendering Europe's shale gas resources governable. --Magdalena Kuchler.
5.) Making sense of citizen science: Stories as a hermeneutic resource. --Gwen Ottinger.

Government, Media, and Popular Narratives on Large System Transitions
6.) Selling stories of techno-optimism? The role of narratives on discursive construction of carbon capture and storage in the Japanese media. --Shinichiro Asayama, Atsushi Ishii.
7.) Narrating expectations for the circular economy: Towards a common and contested European transition. --David Lazarevic, Helena Valve.
8.) Stories about ourselves: How national narratives influence the diffusion of large-scale energy technologies. --Elizabeth Malone, Nathan E. Hultman, Kate L. Anderson, Viviane Romeiro.
9.) Business storytelling about energy and climate change: The case of Brazil’s ethanol industry. --L.L. Benites-Lazaro, N.A. Mello-Théry, M. Lahsen.
10.) Discursive destabilisation of socio-technical regimes: Negative storylines and the discursive vulnerability of historical American railroads. --J.C.D. Roberts.
11.) Villainous or valiant? Depictions of oil and coal in American fiction and nonfiction narratives. --Emily Grubert, Mark Algee-Hewitt.
12.) From laissez-faire to intervention: Analysing policy narratives on interoperability standards for the smart grid in the United States. --Sachiko Muto.

From Local to Personal and Professional Stories
13.) Coal fires, steel houses and the man in the moon: Local experiences of energy transition. --Sarah J. Darby.
14.) Fault lines: Seismicity and the fracturing of energy narratives in Oklahoma. --Virginia Drummond, Emily Grubert.
15.) Storytelling as oral history: Revealing the changing experience of home heating in England. --Barry Goodchild, Aimee Ambrose, Angela Maye-Banbury.
16.) Mental models: Exploring how people think about heat flows in the home. --J. Goodhew, S. Pahl, S. Goodhew, C. Boomsma.
17.) Reflecting on personal and professional energy stories in energy demand research. --Sam Staddon.

Stories as Inquiry
Reimagining Past and Future
18.) Telling tomorrows: Science fiction as an energy futures research tool. --Paul Graham Raven.
19.) What if there had only been half the oil? Rewriting history to envision the consequences of peak oil. --Daniel Pargman, Elina Eriksson, Mikael Höök, Joshua Tanenbaum, Josefin Wangel.
20.) Telling the story of climate change: Geologic imagination, praxis, and policy. --Dylan M. Harris.
21.) Stories of the future: Personal mobility innovation in the United Kingdom. --Noam Bergman.

Stories without Words
22.) Sensing energy: Forming stories through speculative design artefacts. --Loove Broms, Josefin Wangel, Camilla Andersson.
23.) America’s first climate change refugees: Victimization, distancing, and disempowerment in journalistic storytelling. --Victoria Herrmann.

Identities, Makings, and Re-makings
24.) Narrative: An ontology, epistemology and methodology for pro-environmental psychology research. --Philip Brown.
25.) The logics of frugality: Reproducing tastes of necessity among affluent climate change activists. --Jean Léon Boucher.
26.) Hegemonic stories in environmental advocacy testimonials. --Kirstin Munro.
27.) Transitions on the home front: A story of sustainable living beyond eco-efficiency. --Pernilla Hagbert, Karin Bradley.
28.) Native American storytelling toward symbiosis and sustainable design. --Zahraa Saiyed, Paul D. Irwin.
29.) Towards more eclectic understandings of energy demand and change—A tale of sense-making in the messiness of transformative planning. --Charlotte Louise Jensen, Maj-Britt Quitzau.
30.) Imagining renewable energy: Towards a Social Energy Systems approach to community renewable energy projects in the Global South. --Jonathan Cloke, Alison Mohr, Ed Brown.

Stories as Process
Participation, Workshops, and Engagements
31.) Using Narrative Workshops to socialise the climate debate: Lessons from two case studies – centre-right audiences and the Scottish public. --Christopher Shaw, Adam Corner.
32.) Gathering around stories: Interdisciplinary experiments in support of energy system transitions. --Joe Smith, Robert Butler, Rosie J. Day, Axel H. Goodbody, Nicola M. Whyte.
33.) Informing decision making on climate change and low carbon futures: Framing narratives around the United Kingdom’s fifth carbon budget. --Candice Howarth.
34.) “Once upon a time…” Eliciting energy and behaviour change stories using a fairy tale story spine. --Sea Rotmann.
Ottinger, Gwen - Personal Name
Drummond, Virginia - Personal Name
Darby, Sarah J. - Personal Name
Muto, Sachiko - Personal Name
Roberts, J.C.D. - Personal Name
Lazaro, L. L. Benites - Personal Name
Malone, Elizabeth - Personal Name
Lazarevic, David - Personal Name
Asayama, Shinichiro - Personal Name
Kuchler, Magdalena - Personal Name
Mould, Ronald - Personal Name
Day, Julia K. - Personal Name
Moezzi, Mithra - Personal Name
Grubert, Emily - Personal Name
Goodchild, Barry - Personal Name
Volume 31, September 2017
2214-6296
e-Journal PHI
Inggris
Elsevier Ltd.
2017
United Kingdom
310 hlm
LOADING LIST...
LOADING LIST...