We consider in this paper the relations between built form and everyday practices of home-living. These we see as co-constituting a combined domestic carbon space in which sociomaterial interdependencies are constantly at work. Carbon emissions are necessarily caught up in these interdependencies and not separable from them. We use the case of the mainstreaming of zero carbon (zero-C) housing in the UK to explore whether conceiving of domestic carbon in properly sociomaterial terms reveals possibilities for, or resistances to, carbon governance objectives. We find strong resistances to the notion that zero-C might mean simultaneously creating ‘new normals’ of built form and ways of living, with market values and governance delineations resi...
Ambitious carbon reduction targets are driving a new era of carbon control reflecting the UK, the EU...
A rapid transition to ‘zero carbon’ building was announced by the UK Government in December 2006 as ...
A rapid transition to ‘zero carbon’ building was announced by the UK Government in December 2006 as ...
We reflect on the decision to abandon the mainstreaming of zero-carbon house building in England, in...
In 2007, the UK Government announced an ambitious zero-carbon target for all new housing in England....
In this chapter we conceptualise low-carbon housing as an intervention in a system of interconnected...
With the UK committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 80%, and British households accounting...
In the context of global climate change and UK government targets to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) em...
In this paper we examine the failure of the zero carbon homes agenda in the UK and argue that it rep...
Recent climate change statistics attribute over a quarter of carbon emissions to residential energy ...
In this paper, we argue that current research on carbon regulation neglects the complex interactions...
This chapter investigates the often overlooked practices of housing professionals involved in design...
Low carbon housing policies embody visions of the future that shape and constrain current choices be...
The UK Government is committed to all new homes being zero-carbon from 2016. The use of low and zero...
Zero carbon homes have met with mixed reactions from key stakeholders within the housing and energy ...
Ambitious carbon reduction targets are driving a new era of carbon control reflecting the UK, the EU...
A rapid transition to ‘zero carbon’ building was announced by the UK Government in December 2006 as ...
A rapid transition to ‘zero carbon’ building was announced by the UK Government in December 2006 as ...
We reflect on the decision to abandon the mainstreaming of zero-carbon house building in England, in...
In 2007, the UK Government announced an ambitious zero-carbon target for all new housing in England....
In this chapter we conceptualise low-carbon housing as an intervention in a system of interconnected...
With the UK committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 80%, and British households accounting...
In the context of global climate change and UK government targets to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) em...
In this paper we examine the failure of the zero carbon homes agenda in the UK and argue that it rep...
Recent climate change statistics attribute over a quarter of carbon emissions to residential energy ...
In this paper, we argue that current research on carbon regulation neglects the complex interactions...
This chapter investigates the often overlooked practices of housing professionals involved in design...
Low carbon housing policies embody visions of the future that shape and constrain current choices be...
The UK Government is committed to all new homes being zero-carbon from 2016. The use of low and zero...
Zero carbon homes have met with mixed reactions from key stakeholders within the housing and energy ...
Ambitious carbon reduction targets are driving a new era of carbon control reflecting the UK, the EU...
A rapid transition to ‘zero carbon’ building was announced by the UK Government in December 2006 as ...
A rapid transition to ‘zero carbon’ building was announced by the UK Government in December 2006 as ...