Profile
Keywords: | energy transition, public opinion, agenda setting, policy change, framing, climate policy, comparative politics |
FES Funded ProjectsOutputs
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If it ain't broke, don't fix it: How confidence in the oil and gas industry reduces support for a low-carbon energy transitionPoster presentation. T13-C02 University of Calgary, University of Alberta | Activity | 2020-11-23 | | The Climate Risks We Choose to SeePresentation to the biennial Petrocultures Conference, Stavanger Norway, August 24-27, 2022. T13-C02 University of Alberta, University of Calgary | Activity | 2022-08-27 | | The Climate Risks We Choose to SeeT13-C02 University of Alberta, University of Calgary | Activity | 2023-03-15 | | Attitudes Toward Energy Transition in AlbertaOverview of preliminary results from our Alberta survey of attitudes toward energy transition. T13-C02 University of Calgary, University of Alberta | Activity | 2019-10-29 | | Perspectives of a low carbon transition for an energy economy: the case of Albertapanel presentation to the workshop 'Sub-national management of the low-carbon transition for fossil fuel labor forces' organized by the UC Berkeley Centre for Economics, Resources and Innovation (CERI) and the London School of Economics. A Global Climate Action Affiliate Event. T13-C02 University of Alberta | Activity | 2018-09-18 | | Climate Anxiety and Energy Politics: Public Opinion About Energy Transition in AlbertaT13-C02 University of Calgary, University of Alberta | Activity | 2020-03-23 | | Assessing Political Pathways for Energy TransitionT13-C02 University of Alberta, University of Calgary | Activity | 2018-09-12 | | Attitudes about Energy Transition in AlbertaT13-C02 University of Calgary, University of Alberta | Activity | 2020-10-09 | | What Shapes Canadians’ Attitudes about Energy Transition?T13-C02 University of Calgary, University of Alberta | Activity | 2020-10-09 | | Great Expectations: public opinion about energy transitionWe are in crisis mode. Climate change is simultaneously the grandest global challenge and a daily challenge to individuals’ perceptions, motivations, and actions. Economic sociology equips us to examine the heart of this crisis: the means, institutions, and regulations of production, exchange, and consumption. To complement this, we must have theoretical and methodological approaches that simultaneously bridge these macro-global and micro-actor levels. The aim of our article is to propose a research agenda to examine climate change from a field perspective to serve as this bridge.
T13-C02 University of Calgary, University of Alberta | Publication | 2021-05-12 | | Understanding how racial resentment fuels opposition to energy transitionT13-C02 University of Calgary, University of Alberta | Activity | 2022-08-26 | |
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