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Siddharth Sareen

Researcher at University of Stavanger

Publications -  68
Citations -  891

Siddharth Sareen is an academic researcher from University of Stavanger. The author has contributed to research in topics: Energy transition & Sustainability. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 50 publications receiving 402 citations. Previous affiliations of Siddharth Sareen include University of Bergen.

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Bridging socio-technical and justice aspects of sustainable energy transitions

TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive approach that pulls together critical aspects of both socio-technical development and energy justice in understanding sustainable transitions is presented. But the authors do not consider the socio-economic aspects of sustainable energy transitions.
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Contextualizing climate justice activism: Knowledge, emotions, motivations, and actions among climate strikers in six cities

TL;DR: This article conducted interviews with 64 climate protesters in six cities: Brighton and London (United Kingdom), Montreal (Canada), New Haven and New York (USA), and Stavanger (Norway) to examine their knowledge, emotions, motivations and actions in relation to climate change, including any lifestyle changes they have undertaken before or after their protests.
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European energy poverty metrics: Scales, prospects and limits

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose an analytical framework with five dimensions of energy poverty metrology, and illustrate it using multi-scalar cases from three European countries, including historical trajectories, data flattening, contextualised identification, new representation and policy uptake.
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Solar ‘power’: Socio-political dynamics of infrastructural development in two Western Indian states

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the trajectory of renewable energy development in two Western Indian states, Rajasthan and Gujarat, highlighting how regional particularities and path dependence have shaped the emergence of solar energy, often in ways that run counter to both expected and hoped for results.
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Validity of energy social research during and after COVID-19: challenges, considerations, and responses

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that those conducting social research in the energy domain should give special consideration to the internal and external validity of their work conducted during this pandemic period, and set out a number of principles that researchers can consider to give themselves and research users greater confidence that findings and recommendations will still be applicable in years to come.