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Following on from the ground-breaking first edition, which received
the 2014 EDRA Achievement Award, this fully updated text includes
new chapters on current issues in the built environment, such as
GIS and mapping, climate change, and qualitative approaches. Place
attachments are powerful emotional bonds that form between people
and their physical surroundings. They inform our sense of identity,
create meaning in our lives, facilitate community, and influence
action. Place attachments have bearing on such diverse issues as
rootedness and belonging, placemaking and displacement, mobility
and migration, intergroup conflict, civic engagement, social
housing and urban redevelopment, natural resource management, and
global climate change. In this multidisciplinary book, Manzo and
Devine-Wright draw together the latest thinking by leading scholars
from around the globe, including contributions from scholars such
as Daniel Williams, Mindy Fullilove, Randy Hester, and David
Seamon, to capture significant advancements in three main areas:
theory, methods, and applications. Over the course of fifteen
chapters, using a wide range of conceptual and applied methods, the
authors critically review and challenge contemporary knowledge,
identify significant advances, and point to areas for future
research. This important volume offers the most current
understandings about place attachment, a critical concept for the
environmental social sciences and placemaking professions.
Throughout the world, the threat of climate change is pressing
governments to accelerate the deployment of technologies to
generate low carbon electricity or heat. But this is frequently
leading to controversy, as energy and planning policies are revised
to support new energy sources or technologies (e.g. offshore wind,
tidal, bioenergy or hydrogen energy) and communities face the
prospect of unfamiliar, often large-scale energy technologies being
sited near to their homes. Policy makers in many countries face
tensions between 'streamlining' planning procedures, engaging with
diverse publics to address what is commonly conceived as 'NIMBY'
(not in my back yard) opposition, and the need to maintain
democratic, participatory values in planning systems. This volume
provides a timely, international review of research on public
engagement, in contexts of diverse, innovative energy technologies.
Public engagement is conceived broadly - as the interaction between
how developers and other key actors engage with publics about
energy technologies (including assumptions held about the methods
used, such as the provision of financial benefits or the holding of
deliberative events), and how individuals and groups engage with
energy policies and projects (including indirectly through the
media and directly through emotional and behavioural responses).
The book's contributors are leading experts in the UK, Europe,
North and South America and Australia drawn from a variety of
relevant social science disciplinary perspectives. The book makes a
significant contribution to our existing knowledge, as well as
providing interested professionals, policymakers and members of the
public with a timely overview of the critical issues involved in
public engagement with low carbon energy technologies.
Following on from the ground-breaking first edition, which received
the 2014 EDRA Achievement Award, this fully updated text includes
new chapters on current issues in the built environment, such as
GIS and mapping, climate change, and qualitative approaches. Place
attachments are powerful emotional bonds that form between people
and their physical surroundings. They inform our sense of identity,
create meaning in our lives, facilitate community, and influence
action. Place attachments have bearing on such diverse issues as
rootedness and belonging, placemaking and displacement, mobility
and migration, intergroup conflict, civic engagement, social
housing and urban redevelopment, natural resource management, and
global climate change. In this multidisciplinary book, Manzo and
Devine-Wright draw together the latest thinking by leading scholars
from around the globe, including contributions from scholars such
as Daniel Williams, Mindy Fullilove, Randy Hester, and David
Seamon, to capture significant advancements in three main areas:
theory, methods, and applications. Over the course of fifteen
chapters, using a wide range of conceptual and applied methods, the
authors critically review and challenge contemporary knowledge,
identify significant advances, and point to areas for future
research. This important volume offers the most current
understandings about place attachment, a critical concept for the
environmental social sciences and placemaking professions.
Throughout the world, the threat of climate change is pressing
governments to accelerate the deployment of technologies to
generate low carbon electricity or heat. But this is frequently
leading to controversy, as energy and planning policies are revised
to support new energy sources or technologies (e.g. offshore wind,
tidal, bioenergy or hydrogen energy) and communities face the
prospect of unfamiliar, often large-scale energy technologies being
sited near to their homes. Policy makers in many countries face
tensions between 'streamlining' planning procedures, engaging with
diverse publics to address what is commonly conceived as 'NIMBY'
(not in my back yard) opposition, and the need to maintain
democratic, participatory values in planning systems. This volume
provides a timely, international review of research on public
engagement, in contexts of diverse, innovative energy technologies.
Public engagement is conceived broadly - as the interaction between
how developers and other key actors engage with publics about
energy technologies (including assumptions held about the methods
used, such as the provision of financial benefits or the holding of
deliberative events), and how individuals and groups engage with
energy policies and projects (including indirectly through the
media and directly through emotional and behavioural responses).
The book's contributors are leading experts in the UK, Europe,
North and South America and Australia drawn from a variety of
relevant social science disciplinary perspectives. The book makes a
significant contribution to our existing knowledge, as well as
providing interested professionals, policymakers and members of the
public with a timely overview of the critical issues involved in
public engagement with low carbon energy technologies.
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