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E-raamat: Handbook on Energy Justice

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Offering a unique and critical perspective on energy justice, this Handbook delves into an emerging field of inquiry encapsulating multiple strands of scholarship on energy systems. Covering key topics including generation, transmission, distribution and demand, it explores fundamental questions surrounding policy, climate change, security and social movements.

The Handbook illuminates the rapidly expanding and diversifying scholarly domains where energy justice has developed to date. Chapters provide an overview on energy justice issues across a range of socio-technical and political contexts, including differences along lines of race, gender, age, geography, housing, socio-economic status and infrastructure. The Handbook further incorporates non-Western perspectives to expand the transitional vocabulary and frameworks of energy justice.





Grounded in empirically rich case studies from across the world to support nuanced framings, situated methods and informed policy, this Handbook will be of interest to students of development, human geography, environmental policy and politics. It will also be useful to practitioners working in international organisations and agencies working in development and the environment.

Arvustused

Handbook on Energy Justice is an accomplished work that surveys the literature on energy justice and moves it forward. The volume is sophisticated and academic, but it never forgets the practical concerns of the real world, and it will be an indispensable companion for academics and practitioners. -- Leonard M. Livingstone, The Energy Journal The Handbook on Energy Justice offers a rich collection that both consolidates the field and pushes its boundaries in new and interesting ways, drawing together multiple and divergent accounts of the possibilities and challenges of energy justice as a concept and call to action. A much-needed compass for our challenging times. -- Harriet Bulkeley, Durham University, UK

List of figures
vii
List of tables
ix
List of contributors
x
Acknowledgements xvii
Introduction to the Handbook on Energy Justice 1(12)
Sara Fuller
Stefan Bouzarovski
1 Whole-systems energy justice
13(12)
Adolfo Mejia-Montero
Kirsten E. H. Jenkins
2 Transport and energy justice
25(15)
Karen Lucas
Muhammad Adeel
3 Energy justice and flexibility
40(25)
Michael Fell
Gareth Powells
Charlotte Johnson
Juan Pablo Cardenas Alvarez
Juan Manuel Espana Forero
Santiago Ortega Arango
4 Energy justice and health
65(14)
Kimberley C. O'Sullivan
5 Energy justice and development
79(15)
Joshua Kirshner
Jessica Omukuti
6 Rural energy justice
94(18)
Conor Harrison
Shelley Welton
7 Energy justice and housing
112(19)
Sergio Tirado-Herrero
8 Tracing the roots of energy justice in action: environmental justice, climate justice, and the New York Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act
131(13)
Raya Salter
9 Combating power imbalance and arbitrariness through procedural energy justice
144(14)
Roman Sidortsov
Corey Katz
10 Quantifying energy justice
158(17)
Benjamin C. McLellan
Andrew J. Chapman
11 Policy barriers and the dynamics of energy justice
175(13)
Iain Todd
12 Energy justice and gender
188(13)
Caitlin Robinson
Neil Simcock
Saska Petrova
13 Energy justice across the life-course
201(12)
Gordon Waitt
14 Energy justice, modernity and transitions: more-than-modern energy for all in the Global South
213(13)
Paul Munro
15 The right to energy: learning from struggles for food, water, and rights to nature
226(14)
Tristan Partridge
16 Towards more pluralistic energy justice frameworks
240(13)
Sandra Jazmin Barragan-Contreras
17 Energy justice as a new communal project? Community energy systems and the energy access gap
253(16)
Vanesa Castan Broto
Enora Robin
18 Energy justice in Southwest Iran: mitigating the socio-economic and environmental impacts of the fossil fuel sector and building the principles of equity-guided development
269(21)
Farzaneh Khayat
Lemir Teron
19 Ensuring the just in Just Transition: making the case for a community-level perspective
290(13)
Liv Yoon
20 Energy democracy and energy justice in conversation: interconnections, divergences and ways forward
303(16)
Julie L. MacArthur
Cathrine Dyer
Derya Tarhan
Afterword 319(2)
Kieran Pradeep
Index 321
Edited by Stefan Bouzarovski, School of Environment, Education and Development, The University of Manchester, UK, Sara Fuller, School of Social Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia and Tony G. Reames, School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, US