Energy and Power: Germany in the Age of Oil, Atoms, and Climate Change
Autor Stephen G. Grossen Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 iul 2023
Preț: 257.45 lei
Preț vechi: 283.71 lei
-9% Nou
Puncte Express: 386
Preț estimativ în valută:
49.28€ • 51.36$ • 41.02£
49.28€ • 51.36$ • 41.02£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 06-12 decembrie
Livrare express 30 noiembrie-06 decembrie pentru 67.83 lei
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197667712
ISBN-10: 0197667716
Pagini: 416
Ilustrații: 38 b/w halftones
Dimensiuni: 239 x 162 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.69 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197667716
Pagini: 416
Ilustrații: 38 b/w halftones
Dimensiuni: 239 x 162 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.69 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Stephen Gross has written a magnum opus that will stand as a landmark publication not only in postwar German history, but also at the intersection of global economic and environmental history. It offers a fascinating and persuasive account of how an intersection of idiosyncratic regulatory thinking, and a powerful anti-nuclear movement, set Germany on a peculiar path or Sonderweg in energy politics and trapped the country on Europe's economic and political fault-line.
The shift to renewables changes modern society's energy base, possibly the most foundational decision we will take. With a topic grabbed from today's headlines and given meticulous historical analysis as it unfolded in Germany—a nation in the energy avant-garde, yet also still enmired in (Russian-supplied) fossil fuels—Gross delivers a scholarly coup.
Energy and Power shows that cheap oil and gas were not the only paths to a successful national economy. Instead, German leaders in the postwar era connected energy to security, social stability, and, intermittently, sustainability. In fascinating ways, Gross shows how a range of players—from green activists to unions to corporations— pursued Germany's ecological modernization.
Perhaps the timeliest book of the year: Stephen G. Gross centers energy history to provide a compelling new interpretation of postwar Germany. In a brilliant sweep, he takes the reader through West Germany's energy crises and transitions from the 1950s into the new millennium. Whoever wants to understand Germany's past and current energy predicaments will find answers in this field-changing book.
These excellent volumes demonstrate that understanding West Germany's past can provide useful insights into contemporary Germany's economic and political predicament, and its eventual choices for the future.
This is a remarkable, important, wonderfully researched book that beautifully elucidates energy politics at the highest levels and that should be read alongside studies that take a bottom-up approach to the subject.
Gross uses energy history to reshape the way economic ideas are incorporated into the history of postwar western Europe. By dissecting energy debates, Gross reveals the importance of differences and developments within individual economic traditions; he also shows how politicians and advocates adopted and re purposed ideas and terminology from different schools of economic thought, hitching them to visions of the future that could form the basis for new political coalitions and drive social and economic change...Energy and Power will be a foundational work for scholars working in this vein.
For students and campaigners interested in energy transition today, one lesson to take away from this rich book is just how contested such transitions have been at any stage. Gross reveals the conflicts, negotiations, compromises, and concessions involved in energy policy. Energy transitions are rarely clear-cut or straightforward. Fuels co-exist. Germany may have erected many wind turbines and shut down its own hard coal mines, but it nonetheless continues to mine lignite and import hard coal from abroad. In the last decade, Germany'smuch lauded Energiewende has been ripe with contradictions. This book helps us understand why.
The shift to renewables changes modern society's energy base, possibly the most foundational decision we will take. With a topic grabbed from today's headlines and given meticulous historical analysis as it unfolded in Germany—a nation in the energy avant-garde, yet also still enmired in (Russian-supplied) fossil fuels—Gross delivers a scholarly coup.
Energy and Power shows that cheap oil and gas were not the only paths to a successful national economy. Instead, German leaders in the postwar era connected energy to security, social stability, and, intermittently, sustainability. In fascinating ways, Gross shows how a range of players—from green activists to unions to corporations— pursued Germany's ecological modernization.
Perhaps the timeliest book of the year: Stephen G. Gross centers energy history to provide a compelling new interpretation of postwar Germany. In a brilliant sweep, he takes the reader through West Germany's energy crises and transitions from the 1950s into the new millennium. Whoever wants to understand Germany's past and current energy predicaments will find answers in this field-changing book.
These excellent volumes demonstrate that understanding West Germany's past can provide useful insights into contemporary Germany's economic and political predicament, and its eventual choices for the future.
This is a remarkable, important, wonderfully researched book that beautifully elucidates energy politics at the highest levels and that should be read alongside studies that take a bottom-up approach to the subject.
Gross uses energy history to reshape the way economic ideas are incorporated into the history of postwar western Europe. By dissecting energy debates, Gross reveals the importance of differences and developments within individual economic traditions; he also shows how politicians and advocates adopted and re purposed ideas and terminology from different schools of economic thought, hitching them to visions of the future that could form the basis for new political coalitions and drive social and economic change...Energy and Power will be a foundational work for scholars working in this vein.
For students and campaigners interested in energy transition today, one lesson to take away from this rich book is just how contested such transitions have been at any stage. Gross reveals the conflicts, negotiations, compromises, and concessions involved in energy policy. Energy transitions are rarely clear-cut or straightforward. Fuels co-exist. Germany may have erected many wind turbines and shut down its own hard coal mines, but it nonetheless continues to mine lignite and import hard coal from abroad. In the last decade, Germany'smuch lauded Energiewende has been ripe with contradictions. This book helps us understand why.
Notă biografică
Stephen G. Gross is Associate Professor of History and Director of the Center of European and Mediterranean Studies at New York University. After working at the Bureau of Economic Analysis (Department of Commerce) in Washington DC, he received his PhD in history from UC Berkeley. He is the author of Export Empire: German Soft Power in Southeastern Europe, 1890-1945, which explores the political economy of the Nazi Empire. His research has been supported by the Fulbright Fellowship, the German Academic Exchange Program, the Institute for New Economic Thinking, the Andrew Carnegie Foundation, and the Andrew Mellon New Directions Fellowship, through which he earned a certificate of sustainable finance at Columbia University.