Projects per year
Abstract
This Special Issue explores the anthropology of energy by highlighting the unique contributions an ethnographic perspective offers to understanding energy and ethics. We propose the term energy ethics to capture the ways in which people understand and ethically evaluate energy. The term encompasses the multiple and varied ways that people experience, conceptualize, and evaluate matters of energy. Out of the diversity of fieldsites, research methods, conceptual frameworks, and disciplinary backgrounds that characterize the articles in the special issue, three clear themes emerge. The first is that multiple, conflicting understandings of energy animate how people engage it in their everyday lives and work. The second is that diversity exists in how people make ethical judgments about the role of energy in the types of 'good societies' they imagine for themselves. Finally, the articles underscore the significance of government interests and public policy for shaping people's experiences of and ethical judgments about energy. These perspectives reveal the value of research that is attuned to the ways in which people view the world and the place of energy in it, opening up space to identify and reflect on our taken-for-granted assumptions.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1-6 |
Journal | Energy Research and Social Science |
Volume | 30 |
Early online date | 27 Jun 2017 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Aug 2017 |
Keywords
- Anthropology
- Ethnography
- Ethics
- Energy
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Dive into the research topics of 'Exploring the anthropology of energy: ethnography, energy and ethics'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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Energy Ethics in the Contemporary World: Energy Ethics in the Contemporary World
High, M. M. (PI)
5/04/15 → 6/04/15
Project: Standard
Profiles
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Mette Marie High
- Social Anthropology - Professor
- Centre for Energy Ethics - Director of the Centre for Energy Ethics
Person: Academic