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E-raamat: Energy as a Sociotechnical Problem: An Interdisciplinary Perspective on Control, Change, and Action in Energy Transitions

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Energy as a Sociotechnical Problem offers an innovative approach to equip interdisciplinary research on sociotechnical transitions with coherence and focus. The book emphasizes sociotechnical problems in three analytical dimensions:

- In the control dimension, contributing authors examine how control can be maintained despite increasing complexity and uncertainty, e.g., in power grid operations or on energy markets;

- In the change dimension, the authors explore if and how change is possible despite the need for stable orientation, e.g., regarding discourses, real-world labs and learning;

- Finally, in the action dimension, the authors analyze how the ability to act on a permanent basis is sustained despite opaqueness and ignorance, exemplified by the work on trust, capabilities or individual motives.

Drawing on contributions from engineering, economics, philosophy, political science, psychology and sociology, the book assembles a range of classic and current themes including innovation, resilience, institutional economics, design or education. Energy as a Sociotechnical Problem presents the ongoing transformation of the energy complex as a multidimensional process, in which the analytical dimensions interact with each other in shaping the energy future. As such, this book will be of great interest to students and scholars of energy transitions, energy science and environmental social science more generally, as well as to practitioners working within the field of energy policy.

Arvustused

"This book follows a promising approach in putting together various interdisciplinary and up-to-date perspectives on energy transitions in a structured way. It thereby provides interesting new insights for further understanding interrelations of circumstances and finding ways for handling the complexity of energy transitions within a socio-technical background." -- Bert Droste-Franke, Head of Energy Department, EA European Academy of Technology and Innovation Assessment GmbH, Germany

"This is a timely and ambitious collection of disciplinary perspectives on the rapidly accelerating shift towards energy transition. By framing the process as a "socio-technical problem", the authors provide an integrative view, which is direly needed to tackle the challenges of this real-world experiment." -- Bernhard Truffer, Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland, and Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, The Netherlands

"You wont find better proof of the value added by a truly interdisciplinary approach to key sociotechnical problems than this book. The last chapter summarizing and demonstrating the case for a more expansive, integrated thinking is the best introduction I know for more effectively addressing the energy transitions taking place across much of the world." -- Emery Roe, Center for Catastrophic Risk Management, University of California, Berkeley, USA

List of figures
ix
List of tables
x
List of contributors
xi
Acknowledgments xv
1 Introduction
1(13)
Christian Buscher
Jens Schippl
Patrick Sumpf
2 Framing energy as a sociotechnical problem of control, change, and action
14(25)
Christian Buscher
PART I Sociotechnical problem of control
39(84)
3 Power systems in transition: dealing with complexity
41(38)
Wolfgang Kroger
Cen Nan
4 Aligning institutions and technologies in energy systems
79(17)
Rolf W. Kunneke
5 Exposure and vulnerability of the energy system to internal and external effects
96(27)
Marcus Wiens
Wolfgang Raskob
Florian Diehlmann
Stefan Wandler
Frank Schultmann
PART II Sociotechnical problem of change
123(54)
6 Real-world experiments as generators of sociotechnical change
125(14)
Matthias Gross
7 Learning and disruptive innovation in energy transitions: who causes which constraints in the German electricity transition?
139(22)
Gerhard Fuciis
8 Energy system transformation and inertia in the UK: a discourse-institutional perspective
161(16)
Audley Genus
Marfuga Iskandarova
Leigh Champagnie
PART III Sociotechnical problem of action
177(66)
9 The energy system and trust: public, organizational, and transsystemic perspectives
179(21)
Patrick Sumpf
10 Shaping our energy future: the irreducible entanglement of the ethical, social, and technical realms
200(21)
Rafaela Hillerbrand
11 Technology and motives: the challenge of energy consumption behavior
221(22)
Siegmar Otto
Inga Wittenberg
ADDENDUM
Observing sociotechnical problems
243(2)
12 Observing amplified sociotechnical complexity: challenges for technology assessment regarding energy transitions
245(17)
Todd R. La Porte
13 Energy as a sociotechnical problem: a concluding discussion
262(15)
Christian Buscher
Jens Schippl
Patrick Sumpf
Index 277
Christian Büscher is a senior researcher at the Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis (ITAS), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany.

Jens Schippl is a senior researcher at the Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis (ITAS), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany.

Patrick Sumpf is a research associate at the Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis (ITAS), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany.