Oxford Handbook of Energy and Society
Herausgeber: Davidson, Debra J; Gross, Matthias
Oxford Handbook of Energy and Society
Herausgeber: Davidson, Debra J; Gross, Matthias
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The Oxford Handbook of Energy and Society offers a collection of contemporary sociological research, highlighting the growing instability and disruptions associated with fossil-fuel-dependence, and the emerging challenges and innovations associated with a transition away from fossil fuels. Regional case studies of different energy resources from around the world are featured, as are the roles of politics, markets, technology, social movements, and consumers,all contributing to a complex systems perspective on the uncertain future of energy-society relations.
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The Oxford Handbook of Energy and Society offers a collection of contemporary sociological research, highlighting the growing instability and disruptions associated with fossil-fuel-dependence, and the emerging challenges and innovations associated with a transition away from fossil fuels. Regional case studies of different energy resources from around the world are featured, as are the roles of politics, markets, technology, social movements, and consumers,all contributing to a complex systems perspective on the uncertain future of energy-society relations.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 600
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. August 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 183mm x 41mm
- Gewicht: 1197g
- ISBN-13: 9780190633851
- ISBN-10: 0190633859
- Artikelnr.: 52526015
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 600
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. August 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 183mm x 41mm
- Gewicht: 1197g
- ISBN-13: 9780190633851
- ISBN-10: 0190633859
- Artikelnr.: 52526015
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Debra J. Davidson is Professor of Environmental Sociology in the Department of Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology at the University of Alberta, Canada. Her primary areas of teaching and research include the social dimensions of energy food systems, with special interest in the impacts on, and the observed and potential institutional transformation in, energy and food systems due to climate change. She is co-author of Challenging Legitimacy at the Precipice of Energy Calamity, with Mike Gismondi (2011), and co-editor of Consuming Sustainability: Critical Perspectives on Socio-ecological Change, with Kirstin Hatt (2005). Matthias Gross is Professor of Environmental Sociology at Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research-UFZ in Leipzig, Germany, and by joint appointment, the University of Jena, Germany. His recent research focuses on the changing role of civil society, alternative energy systems, the sociology of engineering, real world experiments, ecological design, renewable energy systems, risk and ignorance, and theories of the knowledge society. He is a founding editor of the journal Nature + Culture. Book publications in English include Ignorance and Surprise: Science, Society, and Ecological Design (2010), Renewable Energies (2014, with Rüdiger Mautz), the Routledge International Handbook of Ignorance Studies (edited with Linsey McGoey, 2015), and Green European: Environmental Behaviour and Attitudes in Europe in a Historical and Cross-Cultural Comparative Perspective (2017, co-editor with Audrone Telesiene).
* Part I. Energy and Society: Key Contemporary Dynamics and Theoretical
Contributions
* 1. A Time of Change, a Time for Change: Energy-Society Relations in
the 21st Century
* Debra J. Davidson and Matthias Gross
* 2. Energy, Climate Change, and Global Governance: The 2015 Paris
Agreement in Perspective
* John Vogler
* 3.Energy Consumption as Part of Social Practices: The Alternative
Approach of Practice Theory
* Ana Horta
* 4. Analyzing the Socio-Technical Transformation of Energy Systems:
The Concept of 'Sustainability Transitions'
* Harald Rohracher
* Part II. Structural/Political-Economic Perspectives: The Persistent
Material and Geopolitical Relevance of Fossil Fuels
* 5. National Energy Signatures: Energetics, Money, and the Structure
of the Global System
* Jalel Sager
* 6. Energy Markets and Trading
* David Mares
* 7. Raw Materialism and Socioeconomic Change in the Coal Industry
* Paul S. Ciccantell and Paul K. Gellert
* 8. The International Political Economy of Eastern European Energy
Security: Russia, Ukraine, and the EU
* Jack D. Sharples
* Part III. Where the Rubber Hits the Road: Consumption Dynamics
* 9. Energy Consumption Trends Across the Globe
* Richard York
* 10. Shifts in Energy Consumption Driven by Urbanization
* Perry Sadorsky
* 11. Theorizing the Behavioral Dimension of Energy Consumption: Energy
Efficiency and the Value-Action Gap
* Marilyn A. Brown and Benjamin K. Sovacool
* 12. Energy Cultures as Sociomaterial Orders of Energy
* Thomas Pfister and Martin Schweighofer
* 13. The Limits of Household Change: Structural Influences over
Individual Consumption
* Janet A. Lorenzen
* Part IV. Is Energy a Human Right? Perspectives on Energy Equity, and
Energy Poverty
* 14. Decreasing Supplies, Increasing Risks in Oil Development
* Christine Shearer
* 15. Industrializing Countries as the New Energy Consumers
* Paulo Manduca, Mauro Berni, Iure Paiva, and José Alexandre Hage
* 16. Energy Poverty, Energy Equity in a World of High Demand and Low
Supply
* Karl-Michael Brunner, Sylvia Mandl, and Harriet Thomson
* 17. Energy Poverty and Climate Change: Elements to Debate
* Marcio Giannini Pereira, Neilton Fidelis da Silva, and Marcos A.V.
Freitas
* Part V. Energy and Publics
* 18. Local Responses to Renewable Energy Development
* Ana Delicado
* 19. User Innovation and Peer Assistance in Small-Scale Renewable
Energy Technologies
* Sampsa Hyysalo and Jouni Juntunen
* 20. The Role of Media Influence in Shaping Public Energy Dialogues
* Aleksandra Wagner
* Part VI. Energy (Re)takes Center-Stage in Politics and Motivates
Shifts in Governance
* 21. Social Movements and Energy
* Ion Bogdan Vasi
* 22. Nightmares and Dreams: Contested Framing of Unconventional Fossil
Fuels
* Jennifer Dodge
* 23. Oil Opposition: Creating Friction in Energy Politics
* Mark CJ Stoddart, Jillian Rene Smith, and Paula Graham
* 24. The Local at the Forefront of Energy Transition: The Example of
the Development of Renewable Electricity in Germany and Sweden
* Cyria Emelianoff
* Part VII. Emerging Trends with the Potential to Generate Significant
Shifts in the Energy Society Relationship
* 25. Are We on the Cusp of a Global Renewable Energy Transition?
* Sybille Roehrkasten
* 26. Technological Optimism in Climate Mitigation: The Case of Carbon
Capture and Storage
* Jennie C. Stephens and Nils Markusson
* 27. Exnovation as a Necessary Factor in Successful Energy Transitions
* Martin David
* 28. In Closing: From 'energy' to 'Energy'
* Matthias Gross and Debra J. Davidson
Contributions
* 1. A Time of Change, a Time for Change: Energy-Society Relations in
the 21st Century
* Debra J. Davidson and Matthias Gross
* 2. Energy, Climate Change, and Global Governance: The 2015 Paris
Agreement in Perspective
* John Vogler
* 3.Energy Consumption as Part of Social Practices: The Alternative
Approach of Practice Theory
* Ana Horta
* 4. Analyzing the Socio-Technical Transformation of Energy Systems:
The Concept of 'Sustainability Transitions'
* Harald Rohracher
* Part II. Structural/Political-Economic Perspectives: The Persistent
Material and Geopolitical Relevance of Fossil Fuels
* 5. National Energy Signatures: Energetics, Money, and the Structure
of the Global System
* Jalel Sager
* 6. Energy Markets and Trading
* David Mares
* 7. Raw Materialism and Socioeconomic Change in the Coal Industry
* Paul S. Ciccantell and Paul K. Gellert
* 8. The International Political Economy of Eastern European Energy
Security: Russia, Ukraine, and the EU
* Jack D. Sharples
* Part III. Where the Rubber Hits the Road: Consumption Dynamics
* 9. Energy Consumption Trends Across the Globe
* Richard York
* 10. Shifts in Energy Consumption Driven by Urbanization
* Perry Sadorsky
* 11. Theorizing the Behavioral Dimension of Energy Consumption: Energy
Efficiency and the Value-Action Gap
* Marilyn A. Brown and Benjamin K. Sovacool
* 12. Energy Cultures as Sociomaterial Orders of Energy
* Thomas Pfister and Martin Schweighofer
* 13. The Limits of Household Change: Structural Influences over
Individual Consumption
* Janet A. Lorenzen
* Part IV. Is Energy a Human Right? Perspectives on Energy Equity, and
Energy Poverty
* 14. Decreasing Supplies, Increasing Risks in Oil Development
* Christine Shearer
* 15. Industrializing Countries as the New Energy Consumers
* Paulo Manduca, Mauro Berni, Iure Paiva, and José Alexandre Hage
* 16. Energy Poverty, Energy Equity in a World of High Demand and Low
Supply
* Karl-Michael Brunner, Sylvia Mandl, and Harriet Thomson
* 17. Energy Poverty and Climate Change: Elements to Debate
* Marcio Giannini Pereira, Neilton Fidelis da Silva, and Marcos A.V.
Freitas
* Part V. Energy and Publics
* 18. Local Responses to Renewable Energy Development
* Ana Delicado
* 19. User Innovation and Peer Assistance in Small-Scale Renewable
Energy Technologies
* Sampsa Hyysalo and Jouni Juntunen
* 20. The Role of Media Influence in Shaping Public Energy Dialogues
* Aleksandra Wagner
* Part VI. Energy (Re)takes Center-Stage in Politics and Motivates
Shifts in Governance
* 21. Social Movements and Energy
* Ion Bogdan Vasi
* 22. Nightmares and Dreams: Contested Framing of Unconventional Fossil
Fuels
* Jennifer Dodge
* 23. Oil Opposition: Creating Friction in Energy Politics
* Mark CJ Stoddart, Jillian Rene Smith, and Paula Graham
* 24. The Local at the Forefront of Energy Transition: The Example of
the Development of Renewable Electricity in Germany and Sweden
* Cyria Emelianoff
* Part VII. Emerging Trends with the Potential to Generate Significant
Shifts in the Energy Society Relationship
* 25. Are We on the Cusp of a Global Renewable Energy Transition?
* Sybille Roehrkasten
* 26. Technological Optimism in Climate Mitigation: The Case of Carbon
Capture and Storage
* Jennie C. Stephens and Nils Markusson
* 27. Exnovation as a Necessary Factor in Successful Energy Transitions
* Martin David
* 28. In Closing: From 'energy' to 'Energy'
* Matthias Gross and Debra J. Davidson
* Part I. Energy and Society: Key Contemporary Dynamics and Theoretical
Contributions
* 1. A Time of Change, a Time for Change: Energy-Society Relations in
the 21st Century
* Debra J. Davidson and Matthias Gross
* 2. Energy, Climate Change, and Global Governance: The 2015 Paris
Agreement in Perspective
* John Vogler
* 3.Energy Consumption as Part of Social Practices: The Alternative
Approach of Practice Theory
* Ana Horta
* 4. Analyzing the Socio-Technical Transformation of Energy Systems:
The Concept of 'Sustainability Transitions'
* Harald Rohracher
* Part II. Structural/Political-Economic Perspectives: The Persistent
Material and Geopolitical Relevance of Fossil Fuels
* 5. National Energy Signatures: Energetics, Money, and the Structure
of the Global System
* Jalel Sager
* 6. Energy Markets and Trading
* David Mares
* 7. Raw Materialism and Socioeconomic Change in the Coal Industry
* Paul S. Ciccantell and Paul K. Gellert
* 8. The International Political Economy of Eastern European Energy
Security: Russia, Ukraine, and the EU
* Jack D. Sharples
* Part III. Where the Rubber Hits the Road: Consumption Dynamics
* 9. Energy Consumption Trends Across the Globe
* Richard York
* 10. Shifts in Energy Consumption Driven by Urbanization
* Perry Sadorsky
* 11. Theorizing the Behavioral Dimension of Energy Consumption: Energy
Efficiency and the Value-Action Gap
* Marilyn A. Brown and Benjamin K. Sovacool
* 12. Energy Cultures as Sociomaterial Orders of Energy
* Thomas Pfister and Martin Schweighofer
* 13. The Limits of Household Change: Structural Influences over
Individual Consumption
* Janet A. Lorenzen
* Part IV. Is Energy a Human Right? Perspectives on Energy Equity, and
Energy Poverty
* 14. Decreasing Supplies, Increasing Risks in Oil Development
* Christine Shearer
* 15. Industrializing Countries as the New Energy Consumers
* Paulo Manduca, Mauro Berni, Iure Paiva, and José Alexandre Hage
* 16. Energy Poverty, Energy Equity in a World of High Demand and Low
Supply
* Karl-Michael Brunner, Sylvia Mandl, and Harriet Thomson
* 17. Energy Poverty and Climate Change: Elements to Debate
* Marcio Giannini Pereira, Neilton Fidelis da Silva, and Marcos A.V.
Freitas
* Part V. Energy and Publics
* 18. Local Responses to Renewable Energy Development
* Ana Delicado
* 19. User Innovation and Peer Assistance in Small-Scale Renewable
Energy Technologies
* Sampsa Hyysalo and Jouni Juntunen
* 20. The Role of Media Influence in Shaping Public Energy Dialogues
* Aleksandra Wagner
* Part VI. Energy (Re)takes Center-Stage in Politics and Motivates
Shifts in Governance
* 21. Social Movements and Energy
* Ion Bogdan Vasi
* 22. Nightmares and Dreams: Contested Framing of Unconventional Fossil
Fuels
* Jennifer Dodge
* 23. Oil Opposition: Creating Friction in Energy Politics
* Mark CJ Stoddart, Jillian Rene Smith, and Paula Graham
* 24. The Local at the Forefront of Energy Transition: The Example of
the Development of Renewable Electricity in Germany and Sweden
* Cyria Emelianoff
* Part VII. Emerging Trends with the Potential to Generate Significant
Shifts in the Energy Society Relationship
* 25. Are We on the Cusp of a Global Renewable Energy Transition?
* Sybille Roehrkasten
* 26. Technological Optimism in Climate Mitigation: The Case of Carbon
Capture and Storage
* Jennie C. Stephens and Nils Markusson
* 27. Exnovation as a Necessary Factor in Successful Energy Transitions
* Martin David
* 28. In Closing: From 'energy' to 'Energy'
* Matthias Gross and Debra J. Davidson
Contributions
* 1. A Time of Change, a Time for Change: Energy-Society Relations in
the 21st Century
* Debra J. Davidson and Matthias Gross
* 2. Energy, Climate Change, and Global Governance: The 2015 Paris
Agreement in Perspective
* John Vogler
* 3.Energy Consumption as Part of Social Practices: The Alternative
Approach of Practice Theory
* Ana Horta
* 4. Analyzing the Socio-Technical Transformation of Energy Systems:
The Concept of 'Sustainability Transitions'
* Harald Rohracher
* Part II. Structural/Political-Economic Perspectives: The Persistent
Material and Geopolitical Relevance of Fossil Fuels
* 5. National Energy Signatures: Energetics, Money, and the Structure
of the Global System
* Jalel Sager
* 6. Energy Markets and Trading
* David Mares
* 7. Raw Materialism and Socioeconomic Change in the Coal Industry
* Paul S. Ciccantell and Paul K. Gellert
* 8. The International Political Economy of Eastern European Energy
Security: Russia, Ukraine, and the EU
* Jack D. Sharples
* Part III. Where the Rubber Hits the Road: Consumption Dynamics
* 9. Energy Consumption Trends Across the Globe
* Richard York
* 10. Shifts in Energy Consumption Driven by Urbanization
* Perry Sadorsky
* 11. Theorizing the Behavioral Dimension of Energy Consumption: Energy
Efficiency and the Value-Action Gap
* Marilyn A. Brown and Benjamin K. Sovacool
* 12. Energy Cultures as Sociomaterial Orders of Energy
* Thomas Pfister and Martin Schweighofer
* 13. The Limits of Household Change: Structural Influences over
Individual Consumption
* Janet A. Lorenzen
* Part IV. Is Energy a Human Right? Perspectives on Energy Equity, and
Energy Poverty
* 14. Decreasing Supplies, Increasing Risks in Oil Development
* Christine Shearer
* 15. Industrializing Countries as the New Energy Consumers
* Paulo Manduca, Mauro Berni, Iure Paiva, and José Alexandre Hage
* 16. Energy Poverty, Energy Equity in a World of High Demand and Low
Supply
* Karl-Michael Brunner, Sylvia Mandl, and Harriet Thomson
* 17. Energy Poverty and Climate Change: Elements to Debate
* Marcio Giannini Pereira, Neilton Fidelis da Silva, and Marcos A.V.
Freitas
* Part V. Energy and Publics
* 18. Local Responses to Renewable Energy Development
* Ana Delicado
* 19. User Innovation and Peer Assistance in Small-Scale Renewable
Energy Technologies
* Sampsa Hyysalo and Jouni Juntunen
* 20. The Role of Media Influence in Shaping Public Energy Dialogues
* Aleksandra Wagner
* Part VI. Energy (Re)takes Center-Stage in Politics and Motivates
Shifts in Governance
* 21. Social Movements and Energy
* Ion Bogdan Vasi
* 22. Nightmares and Dreams: Contested Framing of Unconventional Fossil
Fuels
* Jennifer Dodge
* 23. Oil Opposition: Creating Friction in Energy Politics
* Mark CJ Stoddart, Jillian Rene Smith, and Paula Graham
* 24. The Local at the Forefront of Energy Transition: The Example of
the Development of Renewable Electricity in Germany and Sweden
* Cyria Emelianoff
* Part VII. Emerging Trends with the Potential to Generate Significant
Shifts in the Energy Society Relationship
* 25. Are We on the Cusp of a Global Renewable Energy Transition?
* Sybille Roehrkasten
* 26. Technological Optimism in Climate Mitigation: The Case of Carbon
Capture and Storage
* Jennie C. Stephens and Nils Markusson
* 27. Exnovation as a Necessary Factor in Successful Energy Transitions
* Martin David
* 28. In Closing: From 'energy' to 'Energy'
* Matthias Gross and Debra J. Davidson