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Working to align energy transitions and social equity: An integrative framework linking institutional work, imaginaries and energy justice

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TLDR
In this article, an integrative framework for analysing the work exercised by actors operating within and across different global contexts to align renewable energy and social equity is presented, which can be seen as a triple re-cycle.
Abstract
Recent academic evidence suggests that, in contrast to what is often thought, the introduction of renewable energy infrastructures often leads to negative, not positive, social equity outcomes. Against this background, this paper aims to develop and empirically illustrate an integrative framework for analysing the work – or ‘agency’ – exercised by actors operating within and across different global contexts to align renewable energy and social equity. To this end, the paper first reviews three generative conceptions of agency in the energy transitions literature: institutional work, imaginaries and energy justice. In reviewing their explanatory power as well as their shortcomings, the paper concludes that these different conceptions of agency can be integrated meaningfully in an expanded conceptualisation of institutional work that spans three distinct domains: i) ‘reimagining’, ii) ‘recoding’ and iii) ‘reconfiguring’. This article demonstrates that the three domains can be understood to reiteratively feed into each other in what we call the ‘triple re-cycle’. These iterations produce either bolstering effects that strengthen the potential for positive social equity outcomes or evaporative effects that diminish or undermine this potential. We empirically illustrate the framework in case studies from Germany and South Africa. Overall, we argue that the triple re-cycle, as a heuristic, can provide new insights by conceptually connecting multiple domains of agency in energy transitions, including discursive and material aspects, across different global contexts. Our hope is that identifying potential agency in this way supports work to improve the social equity outcomes of energy transitions globally.

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Citations
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Transformative innovation and translocal diffusion

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Just transition: Framing, organizing, and power-building for decarbonization

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Leapfrogging or lagging? Drivers of social equity from renewable energy transitions globally

TL;DR: This article examined the effects of technology, policy toolkits and path dependence on countries' changing social equity outcomes, against alternative explanations including development, quality of governance, and demographic factors.
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Reimagining energy futures: Global energy transition and dependence on Russian energy as issues in the sociotechnical imaginaries of energy security in Finland

TL;DR: In this paper , a sociotechnical imaginaries framework is used to capture the broader socio-economic dynamics beyond the typical connotation of energy security through supply-side economics, and the identified tensions focused on how future energy security should be governed, whether Russia is a threat or reliable trading partner and supplier of energy, and how to approach the energy transition.
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Positive energy district stakeholder perceptions and measures for energy vulnerability mitigation

Adam X. Hearn
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References
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Framing Processes and Social Movements: An Overview and Assessment

TL;DR: The recent proliferation of research on collective action frames and framing processes in relation to social movements indicates that framing processes have come to be regarded, alongside resource mobilization and political opportunity processes, as a central dynamic in understanding the character and course of social movements.
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Commodities and Capabilities

Amartya Sen
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the relationship between well-being and Sex Bias in India and some international comparative comparisons of the two domains, and present a survey of the relationship.
Journal ArticleDOI

What is agency

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conceptualize agency as a temporally embedded process of social engagement, informed by the past (in its "iterational" or habitual aspect) but also oriented toward the future (as a projective capacity to imagine alternative possibilities) and toward the present, as a practical-evaluative capacity to contextualize past habits and future projects within the contingencies of the moment.
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