Understanding Demand
Influencing Demand
Policies for steering demand
Invisible energy policy
Adapting social practices
Commission on Travel Demand
How Demand Varies
Situations, Sites, Sectors
Domestic IT use
Home heating
Offices and office work
Business travel
Online shopping
Car dependence
Older people and mobile lives
Local smart grids
Cooking and cooling in Asia
Energy, Justice and Poverty
Event Reports
In Search of ‘Good’ Energy Policy – Invisible Energy Policy
DEMAND Research Fellow, Sarah Royston, was invited to give a talk as part of the interdisciplinary lecture series 'In Search of 'Good' Energy Policy' at the University of Cambridge. Sarah introduced the main points of her lecture here, and the full seminar audio can be found here. The paper that Sarah discussed in her talk can be found below: Royston, S., Selby, J. & Shove, E.…
View full post →Demand (1) References
Reference page for the DEMAND Dictionary entry: Demand (1). For the full dictionary, click here. 1. DEMAND Animated Video Series - Episode 1: What is Energy Demand? And Why Does it Matter? 2. De Decker, K. (April 2018) We Can’t Do it Ourselves. 3. De Decker, K (January 2018) How much energy do we need? 4. Cliff, A. and Rinkinen, J. (2018) ‘Visualising electricity demand: use…
View full post →Susann Wagenknecht, University of Siegen
Wednesday 21st February 2018 Accommodating algorithms: Rules, regularities, and infrastructural power in municipal traffic management Susann Wagenknecht, University of Siegen, Germany. and DEMAND visitor In scripting the stop and go of urban mobility, traffic infrastructures are shaped by federal laws and legally-binding engineering guidelines and by the…
View full post →Anna Wanka, University of Vienna
Wednesday 28th February, 2018 Doing Retiring - The Social Practices of Transiting into Retirement and their Implications for Energy Demand Abstract With the ageing of the ‘Baby Boomer’ cohort, more and more adults are transiting from working life into retirement. This transition facilitates a variety of – more and less severe - changes to daily life, like getting up later, but is…
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