Workshop held on 6 October 2016, EDF Lab Paris-Saclay
This workshop aimed to explore how the interrelation being energy use and poverty can be extended in scope to include different categories of energy use, different dimensions of deprivation and different geographical, political and cultural contexts internationally.
A copy of the programme for the workshop can be found here and copies of the presentations can be found below.
Sessions
Introduction to interrelating energy and
poverty: extending the research agenda
Energy vulnerability, social justice, mobility and territories
The management of accesses’ disparities to urban resources: What organisational approaches? A renewed territorial governance?, Elodie Merle. Script
What would be the transport equivalent of fuel poverty? Giulio Mattioli
Who decides what mobility is fair? Caroline Mullen
Knowledge in action: Engaging research findings into action and public debate
Fighting against fuel poverty, Sylvain Decarne
Overview of University of Exeter’s DEMAND Linked Project
Welfare, employment and energy demand, Catherine Butler
Access to energy in various cultural contexts (Global North and South)
Energy vulnerability: an exploratory cross-national comparative research, Ferenc Fodor and Rachel Guyet
Energy access in Sub-Saharan Africa: Case study based on findings from the town of Bukavu (DRC), Sylvie Douzou
Pathways to energy vulnerability:
insights from a qualitative study in
Central and Eastern Europe,
Neil Simcock
Gender and energy poverty in rural Bangladesh, Rosie Day