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.

Highlights

  • The global transition from fossil to renewable energy infrastructures and escalating social inequities within and between countries are two of the most significant contemporary challenges in the shift towards a more sustainable world

  • This paper began with the observation that it is not a foregone conclusion that energy transitions will lead to positive social equity outcomes; the question is, one of agency

  • We started by evalu­ ating three generative conceptions of agency in energy transitions: institutional work, imaginaries and energy justice

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Summary

Introduction

The global transition from fossil to renewable energy infrastructures and escalating social inequities within and between countries are two of the most significant contemporary challenges in the shift towards a more sustainable world. A number of authors explore the ‘institutional work’ undertaken to change the ‘rules of the game’ [22,23]; multi-actor and multi-scalar interactions in transition processes [24,25]; how actors engage with and aim to transform power embedded in policy regimes [26,27,28]; the transformative power of imagined futures [29,30]; and the struggles between actors and insti­ tutional dynamics [31,32] Within this varied body of work, there are multiple fruitful conceptions of agency, each of which stresses important aspects of the interactions between actors, material artefacts, institu­ tional structures, and exogenous trends. The integrative framework of the triple re-cycle, and our operationalisation of it, allows for a newly differentiated yet integral view of the work of aligning energy transitions and social equity

Developing an integrative framework
Defining key terms
Methodological approach
Three conceptions of agency in energy transitions literature
Background
Literature
Imaginaries
Operationalising the triple re-cycle framework
Reimagining the direction and outcome of energy transitions
Recoding the rules guiding energy transitions
Visualising the triple re-cycle
Empirical explorations of the triple re-cycle
REIPPPP
Conclusion
Full Text
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