Women and Energy
This volume of Perspectives offers a collection of largely untold stories that demonstrate women’s agency in energy transitions.
This volume of Perspectives offers a collection of largely untold stories that demonstrate women’s agency in energy transitions.
Taylor examines the conflicts faced by women during energy transitions as professionals in energy management and as primary managers of domestic energy use.
Gooday challenges established assumptions about the inevitability of modern energy decisions and places the agency of women in the foreground of domestic electrification.
The author explores how the first professional women decorators in Britain helped women gain agency in the home.
Sayer looks at candles as an example of how less prominant energy sources and uses play key roles in energy transitions.
Looking to rural Canada, the author shows how women’s concerns for family safety drove energy choices and supplier campaigns.
This edited radio-show transcript provides personal accounts of women’s experiences in rural Ireland during the transition to electricity.
Dolata brings to light how the conflicts faced by women has shaped their agency in energy transitions.
Helbert raises the issue of justice in energy transitions by looking at the discrimination faced by women in oil regions of Nigeria.
This article discusses sea farming and feminist environmental humanities.