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Participation and the Energy Transition: The role of citizenship in actioning effective change

Autor Niall Dunphy, Breffní Lennon, Alexandra Revez, Bin Bin Pearce
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 noi 2024
This book develops a deeper understanding of what is an increasingly applied term across policy cycles and academic discourses, ‘energy citizenship’. It will provide the reader with five distinct chapters, with each in turn examining a specific aspect of the concept and how it has manifested in public discourses.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783031701528
ISBN-10: 3031701526
Pagini: 150
Ilustrații: Approx. 150 p. 15 illus.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Ediția:2025
Editura: Springer Nature Switzerland
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Chapter 1: Citizen, consumer, or (energy) serf: where does our energy future lie?.- Chapter 2: Conceptualising Energy Citizenship.- Chapter 3: Earned citizenship? Normative constructs of participation.- Chapter 4: Participation and Energy Citizenship.- Chapter 5: Towards a better understanding of energy citizenship.

Notă biografică

Niall P. Dunphy is a Senior Research Fellow at the School of Engineering and the Environmental Research Institute at University College Cork, Ireland. He is a transdisciplinary researcher and educator, and he leads a multi-disciplinary research group working at the intersection of science and engineering with the social sciences and humanities. The group’s research focus has a particular emphasis on people’s relationship with energy and the energy system. He has been the principal investigator of over 25 EU- and nationally-funded multidisciplinary collaborative research projects, with competitive research and other funding awards of over €11.4m.
Breffní Lennon is a Research Fellow at the Environmental Research Institute, University College Cork, Ireland. He is a human geographer researching the social, environmental and economic challenges of the energy transition. He is particularly interested in the roles and expectations around citizenship and participation in the energy system. His work engages the theme of society, sustainability, and energy, and is situated at the intersection of the social sciences with science and engineering.
Alexandra Revez is a Research Fellow at MaREI, the SFI Research Centre for Energy, Climate and Marine at University College Cork, Ireland. She is an experienced academic with expertise in Human Geography, Political Science and Community Development. Her research has focused on democratic innovations, social policy, public participation and engaged community science. Alexandra is the Vice-Chair of COST Action SHiFT– Social Sciences and Humanities for Transformation and Climate Resilience, and a contributor participant on the International Energy Agency UsersTCP Gender & Energy Task.
BinBin J. Pearce is an assistant professor for policy analysis and design at the Delft University of Technology. She is the coordinator of the Horizon 2020 project ENCLUDE: Energy Citizens for Inclusive Decarbonization, which aims to operationalise the concept of energy citizenship in order to contribute to the goals of the energy transition. Previously, she was a senior researcher at the Transdisciplinarity Lab in the Institute of Environmental Decisions at ETH Zürich. She conducted research on joint problem framing processes, eliciting cognitive maps and developed a framework for understanding the role of insight discovery in complex problem solving on topics related to sustainable development.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This book develops a deeper understanding of what is an increasingly applied term across policy cycles and academic discourses, ‘energy citizenship’. It will provide the reader with five distinct chapters, with each in turn examining a specific aspect of the concept and how it has manifested in public discourses.
Niall P. Dunphy is a Senior Research Fellow at the School of Engineering and the Environmental Research Institute at University College Cork, Ireland. He is a transdisciplinary researcher and educator, and he leads a multi-disciplinary research group working at the intersection of science and engineering with the social sciences and humanities. The group’s research focus has a particular emphasis on people’s relationship with energy and the energy system. He has been the principal investigator of over 25 EU- and nationally-funded multidisciplinary collaborative research projects, with competitive research and other funding awards of over €11.4m.
Breffní Lennon is a Research Fellow at the Environmental Research Institute, University College Cork, Ireland. He is a human geographer researching the social, environmental and economic challenges of the energy transition. He is particularly interested in the roles and expectations around citizenship and participation in the energy system. His work engages the theme of society, sustainability, and energy, and is situated at the intersection of the social sciences with science and engineering.
Alexandra Revez is a Research Fellow at MaREI, the SFI Research Centre for Energy, Climate and Marine at University College Cork, Ireland. She is an experienced academic with expertise in Human Geography, Political Science and Community Development. Her research has focused on democratic innovations, social policy, public participation and engaged community science. Alexandra is the Vice-Chair of COST Action SHiFT– Social Sciences and Humanities for Transformation and Climate Resilience, and a contributor participant on the International Energy Agency UsersTCP Gender & Energy Task.
BinBin J. Pearce is an assistant professor for policy analysis and design at the Delft University of Technology. She is the coordinator of the Horizon 2020 project ENCLUDE: Energy Citizens for Inclusive Decarbonization, which aims to operationalise the concept of energy citizenship in order to contribute to the goals of the energy transition. Previously, she was a senior researcher at the Transdisciplinarity Lab in the Institute of Environmental Decisions at ETH Zürich. She conducted research on joint problem framing processes, eliciting cognitive maps and developed a framework for understanding the role of insight discovery in complex problem solving on topics related to sustainable development.

Caracteristici

Explores ideas around energy citizenship and how citizen participation can be harnessed in the energy transition Provides an overview of energy citizenship as a contested concept Discussed competing visions of the role(s) for citizen as our energy system(s) evolve to net zero