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The methodologies, geographies, and technologies of energy justice: a systematic and comprehensive review
Author(s) -
Kirsten Jenkins,
Benjamin K. Sovacool,
Niek Mouter,
Nicholas Hacking,
Mary Kate Burns,
Darren McCauley
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
environmental research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.37
H-Index - 124
ISSN - 1748-9326
DOI - 10.1088/1748-9326/abd78c
Subject(s) - injustice , popularity , scope (computer science) , economic justice , systematic review , engineering ethics , agency (philosophy) , sociology , energy (signal processing) , public relations , political science , management science , computer science , social science , law , economics , engineering , statistics , mathematics , medline , programming language
The energy justice literature has seen a rapid surge in both academic and practical popularity. However, there has been less systematic reflection on the research conducted so far, its scope or contribution, nor what it might mean for the future of the concept. To provide insights, this paper presents the results of a systematic and comprehensive review of 155 peer-reviewed articles published across eight databases between January 2008 and December 2019. The aim is firstly to review the current state of the art in the energy justice literature and, secondly, to present findings that support novel recommendations with the potential to enhance the impact of energy justice research, including applications in the economic and planning policy sectors. Critically, our study demonstrates that the literature lacks diversity in its author basis and research design. By contrast, conceptual frameworks and the geographies and technologies of global energy injustice are proliferating. These results illustrate that energy justice has power and agency as a tool. It can act as a protagonist in energy research, provoking researchers to remain reflexively normative and active in identifying injustices and vulnerabilities, and it can act as a promising progenitor, creating new research methods and themes.

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