The Oxford Handbook of Energy and Society
Series: Oxford Handbooks;
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 6 September 2018
- ISBN 9780190633851
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages600 pages
- Size 183x249x40 mm
- Weight 1197 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
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.
MoreLong description:
The Oxford Handbook of Energy and Society presents an overview of this expanding area that has evolved dramatically over the past decade, away from one largely dominated by structural, political economic treatments on the one hand, and social-psychological studies of individual-level attitudes and behaviors on the other, toward a far more conceptually and methodologically rich and exciting field that brings in, for example, social practices, system complexity, risk theory, social studies of science, and social movements theories. This volume seeks to capture the variety of scales and methods, and range of both conceptual and empirical analyses that define the field, while drawing particular attention to indigenous peoples, poverty, political power, communities and cities. Organized into seven sections, chapters cover social theory and energy-society relations, political-economic perspectives, consumption dynamics, energy equity and energy poverty, energy and publics, energy and governance, as well as emerging trends.
The last section discusses emerging trends and opportunities in the energy-society relationship. The authors highlight the latest sociological research and provide their analyses on a developing and growing issue that will continue to impact society. This comprehensive volume showcases the trends, challenges, and opportunities of energy issues and their influence on society.
Table of Contents:
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