| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6557703 | Energy Research & Social Science | 2018 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Energy research in the social sciences has embarked on a 'spatial adventure' (Castán Broto and Baker, 2017). Those setting out on this journey have started from different disciplinary and theoretical locations, yet a “map” of sorts has begun to emerge. Made up of epistemological positions, conceptual vantage points and lines of enquiry, this map demarcates and structures the growing field of energy geography providing a more-or-less agreed guide to the territory. In the paper's first half I reflect on the scope and significance of the spatial turn in energy research. I describe the map now guiding much spatial research on energy, identifying core ideas around which spatially-sensitive social science energy research has come to cohere, notwithstanding its heterogeneity and internal diversity. I offer a supportive reading. In the second half, I offer a more critical reading of the adventure so far, arguing that it is unnecessarily limited in its reading of space. The full potential of a spatial perspective for social science research on energy has yet to be realised. I outline three pathways for realising some of this potential - geographies of knowledge production, differentiation and disassembly - and show how each takes energy research's spatial adventure in new directions.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Energy (General)
Authors
Gavin Bridge,
