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https://doi.org/10.12759/hsr.47.2022.48
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Tensions Within Energy Justice: When Global Energy Governance Amplifies Inequality
Spannungen innerhalb von Energiegerechtigkeit: Wenn globale Energiepolitik Ungleichheit verstärkt
[journal article]
Abstract Global energy justice remains far out of reach. If the goal of energy justice is the universal, equitable, and democratic provision of safe, affordable, and sustainable energy services, the international community currently lacks the physical, ideational, or governance infrastructure necessary for i... view more
Global energy justice remains far out of reach. If the goal of energy justice is the universal, equitable, and democratic provision of safe, affordable, and sustainable energy services, the international community currently lacks the physical, ideational, or governance infrastructure necessary for its realization. Instead, access to energy remains radically unequal, continuing greenhouse gas emissions are creating intergenerational sabotage, and fossil fuel revenues routinely corrupt democratic politics. In addition to distributive injustice, global energy governance also creates dilemmas of procedure and recognition that are our focus. Here, we first identify inherent tensions between local democratic sovereignty and global energy justice and then argue that existing energy governance infrastructures often amplify powerful actors’ leverage over the energy choices and strategies of less powerful communities. We conclude by discussing the design of a governance infrastructure that could promote climate mitigation and energy access goals without exploiting international inequalities in ways that risk undermining justice.... view less
Keywords
energy policy; climate change; energy supply; energy production; sustainability; justice; climate protection; emission; Federal Republic of Germany; Nigeria; development aid
Classification
Special areas of Departmental Policy
Ecology, Environment
Free Keywords
energy justice; equality; democratic sovereignty; Energiewende; Nuclear; Global Energy Governance; Inequality; Infrastructure; communities; governance infrastructure; climate mitigation; energy access
Document language
English
Publication Year
2022
Page/Pages
p. 303-326
Journal
Historical Social Research, 47 (2022) 4
Issue topic
Ruptures, Transformations, Continuities: Rethinking Infrastructures and Ecology
ISSN
0172-6404
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed