Energy Research and Social Science, Volume 34, December 2017
Perspectives
1.) Beyond the tragedy of the commons: Reframing effective climate change governance. --Anthony Patt.
2.) Achievable or unbelievable? Expert perceptions of the European Union targets for emissions, renewables, and efficiency. --Tahamina Khanam, Abul Rahman, Blas Mola-Yudego, Paavo Pelkonen, Jouni Pykäläinen.
Social science and energy studies
3.) Energy, economics, and performativity: Reviewing theoretical advances in social studies of markets and energy. --Antti Silvast.
4.) Working with models: Social and material relations entangled with energy efficiency modelling in Sweden. --Maria Eidenskog.
The acceptance of energy systems
5.) Will communities “open-up” to offshore wind? Lessons learned from New England islands in the United States. --Sarah C. Klain, Terre Satterfield, Suzanne MacDonald, Nicholas Battista, Kai M.A. Chan.
6.) When tourists meet transmission lines: The effects of electric transmission lines on tourism in Iceland. --Þorkell Stefánsson, Anna Dóra Sæþórsdóttir, C. Michael Hall.
7.) Understanding the user in low energy housing: A comparison of positivist and phenomenological approaches. --Aimee Ambrose, Barry Goodchild, Fin O’Flaherty.
8.) Health and energy preferences: Rethinking the social acceptance of energy systems in the United States. --Evan M. Mistur.
9.) Lay perceptions of Carbon Dioxide Utilisation technologies in the United Kingdom and Germany: An exploratory qualitative interview study. --Christopher R. Jones, Barbara Olfe-Kräutlein, Daphne Kaklamanou.
Energy, consumption, and behavior
10.) How do companies decide? Emotional triggers and drivers of investment in natural gas and biogas vehicles. --Natalia Saukkonen, Teemu Laine, Petri Suomala.
11.) Homely social practices, uncanny electricity demands: Class, culture and material dynamics in Pakistan. --Rihab Khalid, Minna Sunikka-Blank.
12.) When social practices meet smart grids: Flexibility, grid management, and domestic consumption in The Netherlands. --Robin Smale, Bas van Vliet, Gert Spaargaren.
13.) Practicing energy prosumption: Using unsolicited online data to reveal the everyday realities of solar thermal panels in the United Kingdom. --Louise Reid, Katherine Ellsworth-Krebs.
14.) Synthesizing building physics with social psychology: An interdisciplinary framework for context and occupant behavior in office buildings. --Simona D’Oca, Chien-Fei Chen, Tianzhen Hong, Zsofia Belafi.
Energy politics and national profiles
15.) The political economy of energy sanctions: Insights from a global outlook 1938–2017. --Itay Fischhendler, Lior Herman, Nir Maoz.
16.) The discursive politics of nuclear waste: Rethinking participatory approaches and public perceptions over nuclear waste storage repositories in Switzerland. --A. Stefanelli, R. Seidl, M. Siegrist.
17.) Stealth democracy, elitism, and citizenship in Finnish energy policy. --Ilkka Ruostetsaari.
18.) Energy diplomacy in South Asia: Beyond the security paradigm in accessing the TAPI pipeline project. --Mirza Sadaqat Huda, Saleem H. Ali.
19.) Competing coalitions: The politics of renewable energy and fossil fuels in Mexico, South Africa and Thailand. --Britta Rennkamp, Sebastian Haunss, Kridtiyaporn Wongsa, Araceli Ortega, Erika Casamadrid.
Energy institutions and governance
20.) “Thinking like a lawyer” in an uncertain world: The politics of climate, law and risk governance in the United States. --Joshua T. Brinkman.
21.) Jack-in-the-black-box: Using Foucault to explore the embeddedness and reach of building level assessment methods. --Libby Schweber.
Energy transitions
22.) The rejection of innovations? Rethinking technology diffusion and the non-use of smart energy services in Finland. --Nina Kahma, Kaisa Matschoss.
23.) Can adoption of rooftop solar panels trigger a utility death spiral? A tale of two U.S. cities. --Mohammed Muaafa, Iqbal Adjali, Patrick Bean, Rolando Fuentes, Frederic H. Murphy.
24.) Actors, networks, and translation hubs: Gas central heating as a rapid socio-technical transition in the United Kingdom. --Clare Hanmer, Simone Abram.
25.) Culture, values, lifestyles, and power in energy futures: A critical peer-to-peer vision for renewable energy. --Juho Ruotsalainen, Joni Karjalainen, Michael Child, Sirkka Heinonen.
26.) How do meters mediate? Energy meters, boundary objects and household transitions in Australia and the United Kingdom. --Heather Lovell, Martin Pullinger, Janette Webb.
27.) Innovation, pathways and barriers in Spain and beyond: An integrative research approach to the clean energy transition in Europe. --Richard J. Hewitt, Nick P. Winder, Verónica Hernández Jiménez, Patricia Martínez Alonso, Lara Román Bermejo.
Energy equity and justice
28.) Defection, recruitment and social change in cooking practices: Energy poverty through a social practice lens. --M.J. Herington, P.A. Lant, S. Smart, C. Greig, E. van de Fliert.
Externalities and the environment
29.) Valuing blackouts and lost leisure: Estimating electricity interruption costs for households across the European Union. --Abhishek Shivakumar, Manuel Welsch, Constantinos Taliotis, Dražen Jakšić, Holger Rogner.
Book reviews
30.) D. Ockwell, R. Byrne, Sustainable Energy for All: Innovation, Technology and Pro-Poor Green Transformations, Routledge (2017). --Thabit Jacob.
31.) K.B. Jones, B.B. Jervey, M. Roche, S. Barnowski. The Electric Battery: Charging Forward to a Low-Carbon Future, Praeger (2017). --Joel B. Eisen.
32.) V. Smil, Energy and Civilization: A History, MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England (2017). --Michael Jefferson.
33.) B.K. Sovacool, M.A. Brown, S.V. Valentine, Fact and Fiction in Global Energy Policy: Fifteen Contentious Questions, Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD. (2016). --Rebecca Sokoloski.
34.) M. Lehtonen, P-B. Joly, L. Aparicio (Eds.), Socioeconomic Evaluation of Megaprojects – Dealing With Uncertainties, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group (2017). --Marin Constantin.
35.) D. Reynolds, Cold War Energy: The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Union, Alaska Chena LLC, Alaska (2016). --Ugo Bardi, Tatiana Yugay.
36.) C. M. Weible, T. Heikkila, K. Ingold, M. Fischer (Eds.), Policy Debates on Hydraulic Fracturing: Comparing Coalition Politics in North America and Europe, Palgrave McMillan, New York, (2016). --Miriam R. Aczel.
1.) Beyond the tragedy of the commons: Reframing effective climate change governance. --Anthony Patt.
2.) Achievable or unbelievable? Expert perceptions of the European Union targets for emissions, renewables, and efficiency. --Tahamina Khanam, Abul Rahman, Blas Mola-Yudego, Paavo Pelkonen, Jouni Pykäläinen.
Social science and energy studies
3.) Energy, economics, and performativity: Reviewing theoretical advances in social studies of markets and energy. --Antti Silvast.
4.) Working with models: Social and material relations entangled with energy efficiency modelling in Sweden. --Maria Eidenskog.
The acceptance of energy systems
5.) Will communities “open-up” to offshore wind? Lessons learned from New England islands in the United States. --Sarah C. Klain, Terre Satterfield, Suzanne MacDonald, Nicholas Battista, Kai M.A. Chan.
6.) When tourists meet transmission lines: The effects of electric transmission lines on tourism in Iceland. --Þorkell Stefánsson, Anna Dóra Sæþórsdóttir, C. Michael Hall.
7.) Understanding the user in low energy housing: A comparison of positivist and phenomenological approaches. --Aimee Ambrose, Barry Goodchild, Fin O’Flaherty.
8.) Health and energy preferences: Rethinking the social acceptance of energy systems in the United States. --Evan M. Mistur.
9.) Lay perceptions of Carbon Dioxide Utilisation technologies in the United Kingdom and Germany: An exploratory qualitative interview study. --Christopher R. Jones, Barbara Olfe-Kräutlein, Daphne Kaklamanou.
Energy, consumption, and behavior
10.) How do companies decide? Emotional triggers and drivers of investment in natural gas and biogas vehicles. --Natalia Saukkonen, Teemu Laine, Petri Suomala.
11.) Homely social practices, uncanny electricity demands: Class, culture and material dynamics in Pakistan. --Rihab Khalid, Minna Sunikka-Blank.
12.) When social practices meet smart grids: Flexibility, grid management, and domestic consumption in The Netherlands. --Robin Smale, Bas van Vliet, Gert Spaargaren.
13.) Practicing energy prosumption: Using unsolicited online data to reveal the everyday realities of solar thermal panels in the United Kingdom. --Louise Reid, Katherine Ellsworth-Krebs.
14.) Synthesizing building physics with social psychology: An interdisciplinary framework for context and occupant behavior in office buildings. --Simona D’Oca, Chien-Fei Chen, Tianzhen Hong, Zsofia Belafi.
Energy politics and national profiles
15.) The political economy of energy sanctions: Insights from a global outlook 1938–2017. --Itay Fischhendler, Lior Herman, Nir Maoz.
16.) The discursive politics of nuclear waste: Rethinking participatory approaches and public perceptions over nuclear waste storage repositories in Switzerland. --A. Stefanelli, R. Seidl, M. Siegrist.
17.) Stealth democracy, elitism, and citizenship in Finnish energy policy. --Ilkka Ruostetsaari.
18.) Energy diplomacy in South Asia: Beyond the security paradigm in accessing the TAPI pipeline project. --Mirza Sadaqat Huda, Saleem H. Ali.
19.) Competing coalitions: The politics of renewable energy and fossil fuels in Mexico, South Africa and Thailand. --Britta Rennkamp, Sebastian Haunss, Kridtiyaporn Wongsa, Araceli Ortega, Erika Casamadrid.
Energy institutions and governance
20.) “Thinking like a lawyer” in an uncertain world: The politics of climate, law and risk governance in the United States. --Joshua T. Brinkman.
21.) Jack-in-the-black-box: Using Foucault to explore the embeddedness and reach of building level assessment methods. --Libby Schweber.
Energy transitions
22.) The rejection of innovations? Rethinking technology diffusion and the non-use of smart energy services in Finland. --Nina Kahma, Kaisa Matschoss.
23.) Can adoption of rooftop solar panels trigger a utility death spiral? A tale of two U.S. cities. --Mohammed Muaafa, Iqbal Adjali, Patrick Bean, Rolando Fuentes, Frederic H. Murphy.
24.) Actors, networks, and translation hubs: Gas central heating as a rapid socio-technical transition in the United Kingdom. --Clare Hanmer, Simone Abram.
25.) Culture, values, lifestyles, and power in energy futures: A critical peer-to-peer vision for renewable energy. --Juho Ruotsalainen, Joni Karjalainen, Michael Child, Sirkka Heinonen.
26.) How do meters mediate? Energy meters, boundary objects and household transitions in Australia and the United Kingdom. --Heather Lovell, Martin Pullinger, Janette Webb.
27.) Innovation, pathways and barriers in Spain and beyond: An integrative research approach to the clean energy transition in Europe. --Richard J. Hewitt, Nick P. Winder, Verónica Hernández Jiménez, Patricia Martínez Alonso, Lara Román Bermejo.
Energy equity and justice
28.) Defection, recruitment and social change in cooking practices: Energy poverty through a social practice lens. --M.J. Herington, P.A. Lant, S. Smart, C. Greig, E. van de Fliert.
Externalities and the environment
29.) Valuing blackouts and lost leisure: Estimating electricity interruption costs for households across the European Union. --Abhishek Shivakumar, Manuel Welsch, Constantinos Taliotis, Dražen Jakšić, Holger Rogner.
Book reviews
30.) D. Ockwell, R. Byrne, Sustainable Energy for All: Innovation, Technology and Pro-Poor Green Transformations, Routledge (2017). --Thabit Jacob.
31.) K.B. Jones, B.B. Jervey, M. Roche, S. Barnowski. The Electric Battery: Charging Forward to a Low-Carbon Future, Praeger (2017). --Joel B. Eisen.
32.) V. Smil, Energy and Civilization: A History, MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England (2017). --Michael Jefferson.
33.) B.K. Sovacool, M.A. Brown, S.V. Valentine, Fact and Fiction in Global Energy Policy: Fifteen Contentious Questions, Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD. (2016). --Rebecca Sokoloski.
34.) M. Lehtonen, P-B. Joly, L. Aparicio (Eds.), Socioeconomic Evaluation of Megaprojects – Dealing With Uncertainties, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group (2017). --Marin Constantin.
35.) D. Reynolds, Cold War Energy: The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Union, Alaska Chena LLC, Alaska (2016). --Ugo Bardi, Tatiana Yugay.
36.) C. M. Weible, T. Heikkila, K. Ingold, M. Fischer (Eds.), Policy Debates on Hydraulic Fracturing: Comparing Coalition Politics in North America and Europe, Palgrave McMillan, New York, (2016). --Miriam R. Aczel.
Jones, Christopher R. - Personal Name
D’Oca, Simona - Personal Name
Reid, Louise - Personal Name
Smale, Robin - Personal Name
Khalid, Rihab - Personal Name
Saukkonen, Natalia - Personal Name
Mistur, Evan M. - Personal Name
Ambrose, Aimee - Personal Name
Stefánsson, Þorkell - Personal Name
Klain, Sarah C. - Personal Name
Eidenskog, Maria - Personal Name
Silvast, Antti - Personal Name
Khanam, Tahamina - Personal Name
Patt, Anthony - Personal Name
Fischhendler, Itay - Personal Name
D’Oca, Simona - Personal Name
Reid, Louise - Personal Name
Smale, Robin - Personal Name
Khalid, Rihab - Personal Name
Saukkonen, Natalia - Personal Name
Mistur, Evan M. - Personal Name
Ambrose, Aimee - Personal Name
Stefánsson, Þorkell - Personal Name
Klain, Sarah C. - Personal Name
Eidenskog, Maria - Personal Name
Silvast, Antti - Personal Name
Khanam, Tahamina - Personal Name
Patt, Anthony - Personal Name
Fischhendler, Itay - Personal Name
Volume 34, December 2017
2214-6296
e-Journal PHI
Inggris
Elsevier Ltd.
2017
United Kingdom
304 hlm
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