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Implementation of energy justice into the energy transition [PDF]
The initial definition of the theoretical concept of energy justice did not assume that it would be evaluated over time and become a conceptual framework that is applicable and can be materialized in practice.
Vitošević Jovana, Đurđević Dragan
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Over half of the population in Dar es Salaam (DSM), Tanzania, predominately relies on wood charcoal as a cooking fuel, and this is expected to rise to meet future demands.
Laura M. S. Fløytrup +2 more
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Abstract The explosion of interest in energy justice as a guiding principle for energy law and policy is a highly significant development with potentially radical implications. This ‘ethical turn’ is associated with increased attention to energy matters by social scientists, driven by disillusionment with neo-liberal energy policies and ...
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This chapter identifies how energy has been conceptualised as a good to be produced, distributed and consumed, illustrating close theoretical engagement with the forms of justice. As Sidortsov and McCauley note, given the tradition’s focus on energy systems as a whole, emerging contributions to this scholarship stress the importance of, and need for ...
Sidortsov R, McCauley D
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Energy justice: A conceptual review [PDF]
Energy justice has emerged as a new crosscutting social science research agenda which seeks to apply justice principles to energy policy, energy production and systems, energy consumption, energy activism, energy security and climate change. A conceptual review is now required for the consolidation and logical extension of this field.
Kirsten Jenkins +4 more
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Setting energy justice apart from the crowd: lessons from environmental and climate justice [PDF]
The continuation and exacerbation of many environmental failures illustrate that environmental and climate justice’s influence on decision-making is not being systematically effective, giving rise to a renewed emphasis on finding new, more focused ...
Jenkins, Kirsten
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Why mundane energy use matters: Energy biographies, attachment and identity [PDF]
In recent years, debates about energy justice have become increasingly prominent. However, the question of what is at stake in claims about energy justice or injustice is a complex one.
Groves, Christopher +4 more
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Democratizing Energy, Energizing Democracy: Central Dimensions Surfacing in the Debate
This perspective piece sets out to contribute to the academic and practitioner debates around energy transitions and democracy initiatives in the age of a climate crisis.
Alevgül H. Sorman +4 more
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Attributing responsibility for energy justice: a case study of the Hinkley Point Nuclear Complex [PDF]
Since 2006, as part of the transition to low-carbon technologies, UK energy policy has moved towards incentivising new nuclear power production. As a result, the UK has developed a (now delayed) strategy to deliver around 16 GW of new nuclear power by ...
Jenkins, Kirsten +2 more
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Decarbonisation and its discontents: a critical energy justice perspective on four low-carbon transitions [PDF]
Low carbon transitions are often assumed as normative goods, because they supposedly reduce carbon emissions, yet without vigilance there is evidence that they can in fact create new injustices and vulnerabilities, while also failing to address pre ...
A Alberini +35 more
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