Energy Possibilities: Rethinking Alternatives and the Choice-Making Process

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State University of New York Press, Aug 31, 1995 - Social Science - 159 pages
Using the perspectives of science, technology, and society studies, this book grapples with questions stimulated by a concern that current energy policies and practices reflect neither the best interests of ordinary people nor decision-making consistent with the traditions and aspirations of democracy. Probing the depths of assumptions made in traditional analysis and assembling minority views, present practices come into focus as startlingly narrow social constructs amidst a vast unexplored terrain of material and socio-cultural possibilities. Questions of power and responsible action are pursued in this context, casting both traditional decision makers and citizens in less than a positive light. The author includes an examination of the experience of the "home power" movement not as "The Solution" to our energy problems, but as a concrete illustration of alternative theory and practice, and of the range of possibilities inherent in energy decisions. The book aims not at recommendations for prescriptive public policy, but primarily at refocusing the reader's attentions, as ultimate policy maker, on the core of the energy question: How do we wish to live in the world?

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Contents

TWO So Much Fuss over Energy?
13
THREE Surely the Experts Have Thought the Matter Out
33
FOUR With Troubles Enough Experts Differ
47
SIX Exploring the Option Space
81
SEVEN Where Does This Leave Us?
113
Notes
129
Index
157
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About the author (1995)

Jesse S. Tatum is Assistant Professor of Science, Technology, and Society at Michigan Technological University.

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