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Oxford Handbook of Energy and Society

Online ISBN:
9780190633875
Print ISBN:
9780190633851
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

Oxford Handbook of Energy and Society

Debra J. Davidson (ed.),
Debra J. Davidson
(ed.)
Resource Econ & Environmental Sociology, University of Alberta
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Debra J. Davidson University of Alberta

Matthias Gross (ed.)
Matthias Gross
(ed.)
Urban and Environmental Sociology, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ
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Matthias Gross Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research—UFZ

Published online:
10 July 2018
Published in print:
27 September 2018
Online ISBN:
9780190633875
Print ISBN:
9780190633851
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

The Oxford Handbook of Energy and Society offers a timely and much-needed synthesis of recent developments in sociological analysis of energy-society relations, representing a wide breadth of contributors in sociology and related disciplines from across the globe. Regional case studies of different energy resources 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. The volume is divided into seven sections. Section One includes chapters that highlight key contemporary dynamics and theoretical contributions in this field of scholarship. Following this is a section showcasing structural perspectives on energy-society relations, including chapters describing the persistent material and geopolitical relevance of fossil fuels. Section Three highlights research on consumers and consumption processes, while Section Four draws attention to emerging research on the inequitable distribution of energy access, and energy poverty. Section Five includes chapters that focus on the influence of publics and civil society in contemporary energy-society relations. Section Six offers chapters that focus on current trends in energy politics, and finally, in the concluding section we offer a selection of chapters that highlight some emerging trends that may have potential to generate—or constrain—significant shifts in energy-society relationships. While offering a diversity of perspectives and empirical research, contributors to this volume agree on a number of key issues that offer important insights into the future of energy-society relations, including the growing instability imposed by fossil-fuel dependence, and challenges and innovations associated with a renewable energy transition.

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