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| Short and very short papers | ||||||
| Submission to House of Lords call for evidence on "behaviour change" | My response concentrates on question 2: “What are the policy implications of recent developments in research on behaviour change” October 2010 | |||||
| On the difference between chalk and cheese. | A response to Whitmarsh et. al’s comments on “Beyond the ABC: climate change policy and theories of social change - forthcoming in Environment and Planning A. | |||||
| Sociology in a Changing Climate | Shove, E.(2010) "Sociology in a Changing Climate", in Sociological Research Online available at: http://www.socresonline.org.uk/15/3/12.html |
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| Social Theory and Climate Change: Questions often, sometimes and not yet asked | Shove, E. (2010), "Social Theory and Climate Change: Questions often, sometimes and not yet asked", Theory, Culture and Society 27(2-3) 277-288. |
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| Shadows of innovation | A paper prepared for a seminar in memory of Ken Green. The paper reflects on the shadowy side of innovation and on processes of un-making and disappearance. |
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| A short note on the concept of habits and its role in environmental policy |
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A discussion of the relation between climate change indoors and out. How do efforts to manufacture 'comfortable conditions' in the built environment affect global outdoor climate change? |
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| Beyond the ABC: climate change policy and theories of social change | Shove E., (2010), "Beyond the ABC: climate change policy and theories of social change" Environment and Planning A 42(6): 1273 – 1285. In this short and deliberately provocative paper I reflect on what seems to be a yawning gulf between the potential contribution of the social sciences and the typically restricted models and concepts of social change embedded in contemporary environmental policy in the UK, and in other countries too. As well as making a strong case for going beyond what I refer to as the dominant paradigm of ‘ABC’—attitude, behaviour, and choice—I discuss the attractions of this model, the blind spots it creates, and the forms of governance it sustains. This exercise provides some insight into why so much relevant social theory remains so marginalised, and helps identify opportunities for making better use of existing intellectual resources. |
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| Refrigerating cities: transitions in urban cooling, (with Gordon Walker) | A discussion of systemic change in the urban indoor climate | |||||