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Canada is a well-endowed country that serves as an ideal model to
lead the reader through the development of energy, resources, and
society historically and into a post-carbon future. The book
provides an historical perspective and describes the physical
resource limitations, energy budgets, and climate realities that
will determine the potential for any transition to renewable
energy. Political and social realities, including jurisdiction and
energy equality issues, are addressed. However, we cannot simply
mandate or legislate policies according to social and political
aspirations. Policies must comply with the realities of physical
laws, such as the energy return on investment (EROI) for
fossil-fuel based and renewable energy systems. EROI is discussed
in both historical terms and in reference to the greater
efficiencies inherent in a distributed generation, mainly electric,
post-carbon society. Meyer explores the often misleading concepts
and terms that have become embedded in society and tend to dictate
our policy making, as well as the language, social and personal
goals, and metrics that need to change before the physical
transition can begin at the required scale. This book also reviews
what nations have been doing thus far in terms of renewables,
including the successes and failures in Canada and across the
globe. Ontario's green energy fiasco, and a comparison of the
different circumstances of Norway and Alberta, for example, are
covered as part of the author's comparison of a wide range of
countries. What are the achievements, plans, and problems that
determine how well different countries are positioned to make "the
transition"? The transition path is complex, and the tools we need
to develop and the physical infrastructure investments we need to
make, are daunting. At some point in time, Canada and Canadians,
like all nations, will be living on 100% renewable energy. Whether
the social and technological level that endures sees us travelling
to the stars, or subsisting at a standard of living more similar to
the pre-fossil fuel era, is far from certain.
The Covid-19 pandemic is a repeating biophysical shock yet one for
which our current socio-economic structure was not prepared.
Climate change, scarcity, depletion of natural resources, and the
inevitable transition to renewable energy are one time events.
Taken together, they present an existential threat to human
society. This book is a guide to navigating these megatrends, which
confront us now but whose consequences will unfold over decades. By
presenting clear options on the path to a renewable energy future,
this book gives readers a broad perspective as well as detailed,
well-illustrated examples to weigh in making decisions which will
secure stability and prosperity for their families, their
communities and their nations.
Canada is a well-endowed country that serves as an ideal model to
lead the reader through the development of energy, resources, and
society historically and into a post-carbon future. The book
provides an historical perspective and describes the physical
resource limitations, energy budgets, and climate realities that
will determine the potential for any transition to renewable
energy. Political and social realities, including jurisdiction and
energy equality issues, are addressed. However, we cannot simply
mandate or legislate policies according to social and political
aspirations. Policies must comply with the realities of physical
laws, such as the energy return on investment (EROI) for
fossil-fuel based and renewable energy systems. EROI is discussed
in both historical terms and in reference to the greater
efficiencies inherent in a distributed generation, mainly electric,
post-carbon society. Meyer explores the often misleading concepts
and terms that have become embedded in society and tend to dictate
our policy making, as well as the language, social and personal
goals, and metrics that need to change before the physical
transition can begin at the required scale. This book also reviews
what nations have been doing thus far in terms of renewables,
including the successes and failures in Canada and across the
globe. Ontario's green energy fiasco, and a comparison of the
different circumstances of Norway and Alberta, for example, are
covered as part of the author's comparison of a wide range of
countries. What are the achievements, plans, and problems that
determine how well different countries are positioned to make "the
transition"? The transition path is complex, and the tools we need
to develop and the physical infrastructure investments we need to
make, are daunting. At some point in time, Canada and Canadians,
like all nations, will be living on 100% renewable energy. Whether
the social and technological level that endures sees us travelling
to the stars, or subsisting at a standard of living more similar to
the pre-fossil fuel era, is far from certain.
"Global Pop" beschreibt in mehr als vierzig Beitragen das Phanomen
"Weltmusik" in seiner ganzen Breite, ordnet es historisch ein und
schliesst es an aktuelle kulturwissenschaftliche Diskussionen an.
Das Buch fuhrt in zentrale Begriffe ein und bietet eine
anschauliche Beschreibung von charakteristischen Akteuren und
musikalischen Genres. Neben den Kunstlern gilt das Interesse auch
exemplarischen Figuren, die fur die Vermittlung von Weltmusik
stehen. Daruber hinaus sind die kulturpolitischen sowie
musikwirtschaftlichen Infrastrukturen von Weltmusik in Deutschland
Thema. Auch der Name "Weltmusik" wird aus verschiedenen
Perspektiven diskutiert, problematisiert und inklusive aktueller
Entwicklungen einer "Weltmusik 2.0" verstanden, die durch
Digitalisierung und Online- Kommunikation gepragt ist.
Das Buch untersucht anhand der Techno-Szene, ob die heutige Jugend
politisches Engagement anders fullt, anders lebt, als die
Jugendgenerationen vor ihr. Besonders Jugendlichen wird in den
letzten Jahren haufig Politikverdrossenheit bescheinigt. Die
Grunde, die dafur angegeben werden sind mit Schlagworten wie
Kommerzialisierung, Mediatisierung und Individualisierung zu
skizzieren, die sich bis in die Jugendstile hinein auswirken.
Typisch erscheint in diesem Zusammenhang "Techno" Musik, die
pragend ist fur eine bestimmte Form der Gruppenbildung bei
Jugendlichen, deutlich zu sehen beispielsweise in der "Love
Parade," an der jahrlich uber eine Million Menschen teilnehmen. Das
Buch geht der Frage nach, ob die Techno-Szene also einen neuen Ort
des Politischen fur junge Menschen darstellt und liefert mithin
sowohl einen Beitrag zur Diskussion um den Wandel von Jugendkultur
als auch zur politischen Soziologie posttraditionaler
Vergemeinschaftungsformen."
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