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Full Description
This open access book is intended to provoke and progress new thinking in the field of energy research for policy makers, practitioners and scholars. By drawing on a broad range of social and innovation theory insights, this book showcases the diversity of energy citizenship and opens up the concept by including multiple 'latent', less visible, forms of energy citizenship that also form part of the energy transition. Focusing on how energy citizenship is considered in eight countries across Europe, each of the contributions highlight the empirical variety, the geographical differences, the contextual challenges, and the socio-political histories out of which energy citizenship develops. In exploring if there are certain convergences and similarities across contexts, the collection makes a significant contribution to debates and discussions surrounding the European Energy Union.
Contents
Chapter 1. Introducing Energy Citizenship (Frances Fahy, Edina Vadovics and Bonno Pel).- Chapter 2. Energy Citizenship in Belgium: Potentials and Paradoxes (Bonno Pel and Jönne Huhnt).- Chapter 3. For and by citizens: the various faces of energy citizenship in Germany (Ariane Debourdeau and Martina Schäfer).- Chapter 4. Energy citizenship in Hungary: diversity, actors, focus and system-contestation (Edina Vadovics and Anita Szőllőssy).- Chapter 5. Energy Citizenship in Ireland: Beyond individual private agency (Benjamin Schmid and Frances Fahy).- Chapter 6. The evolution of energy citizenship in the Netherlands: From protest to partnership with business and government (René Kemp, Marianna Markantoni, Job Zomerplaag, Bonno Pel and Ali Crighton).- Chapter 7. Advancing Energy Citizenship: Hindering and Supporting Factors in Latvia's Energy Transition (Ērika Lagzdiņa, Jānis Brizga, Ivars Kudreņickis, Rasa Ikstena and Raimonds Ernšteins).- Chapter 8. Energy citizenship in Bulgaria: Revealing the current energy landscape and the way forward (Marko Hajdinjak and Desislava Asenova).- Chapter 9. Building trust through energy citizenship? The developing landscape of energy citizenship in France (Karin Thalberg and Camille Defard).- Chapter 10.Conclusions and reflections: the tapestry of energy citizenship can (and should) be woven by all (Edina Vadovics, Marko Hajdinjak, Karin Thalberg, Michael Lydon and Frances Fahy).