This article analyses how social movements shape the sense of place and influence energy transitions. It combines the Multi-Level Perspective of transition studies with the concept sense of place, allowing for an analysis of social movements at different levels linked to the role of placemaking. The Hambach Forest Movement and its network in Germany are taken as a case, drawing on 25 qualitative interviews with people related to the movement, the German Coal Commission, from civil society, and the energy company RWE. The paper finds that the interplay of activities of the network aiming for the protection of the Hambach Forest, and its international reverberations, led to the development of a strong sense of place. The sense of place was cl...
In this paper, we make a case for bringing energy geography into closer dialogue with emotional geog...
This chapter explores the role of space in making sense of climate change. The study compares how...
This thesis investigates how the social organisation of the populations of the South Wales Valleys h...
© 2016 Elsevier Ltd The German Energiewende, or energy transition, is an ambitious suite of policy m...
This photo essay explores the activist occupation of Hambach Forest (Hambi) in western Germany, a fo...
This paper contributes to recent debates in energy geography, especially to energy transition resear...
Despite growing interest in issues of place attachment and land use changes, scholars of renewable e...
It is important to understand public perceptions of energy systems, particularly those located in ru...
Canada’s west coast has been a hotspot of environmental conflict, most recently in defense of climat...
Public engagement in local environmental planning and decision-making is often advocated on various ...
Public engagement in local environmental planning and decision-making is often advocated on various ...
This study examines the impact of coal mining and coal seam methane (CSM) extraction on the ‘sense ...
In the late summer of 2018, the Hambach Forest (North Rhine Westphalia/ Germany) appeared prevalentl...
This essay explores the entangled material and biological afterlife of coal and steel industries in ...
The transition to a low carbon future is necessary to ensure humanity’s sustainable future, yet the ...
In this paper, we make a case for bringing energy geography into closer dialogue with emotional geog...
This chapter explores the role of space in making sense of climate change. The study compares how...
This thesis investigates how the social organisation of the populations of the South Wales Valleys h...
© 2016 Elsevier Ltd The German Energiewende, or energy transition, is an ambitious suite of policy m...
This photo essay explores the activist occupation of Hambach Forest (Hambi) in western Germany, a fo...
This paper contributes to recent debates in energy geography, especially to energy transition resear...
Despite growing interest in issues of place attachment and land use changes, scholars of renewable e...
It is important to understand public perceptions of energy systems, particularly those located in ru...
Canada’s west coast has been a hotspot of environmental conflict, most recently in defense of climat...
Public engagement in local environmental planning and decision-making is often advocated on various ...
Public engagement in local environmental planning and decision-making is often advocated on various ...
This study examines the impact of coal mining and coal seam methane (CSM) extraction on the ‘sense ...
In the late summer of 2018, the Hambach Forest (North Rhine Westphalia/ Germany) appeared prevalentl...
This essay explores the entangled material and biological afterlife of coal and steel industries in ...
The transition to a low carbon future is necessary to ensure humanity’s sustainable future, yet the ...
In this paper, we make a case for bringing energy geography into closer dialogue with emotional geog...
This chapter explores the role of space in making sense of climate change. The study compares how...
This thesis investigates how the social organisation of the populations of the South Wales Valleys h...