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22 - Responses and Final Thoughts

from Part III - Multidisciplinary Cases

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 June 2019

Marc Ozawa
Affiliation:
Energy Policy Research Group, University of Cambridge
Jonathan Chaplin
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Michael Pollitt
Affiliation:
Judge Business School, Cambridge
David Reiner
Affiliation:
Judge Business School, Cambridge
Paul Warde
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

The final chapter presents responses to the content of the entire book by policy practitioners who have dealt with the realities of constructing and implementing policies. They include essays by Emily Shuckburgh, OBE, deputy head of the Polar Oceans Team at the British Antarctic Survey; John Deutch, currently Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and former Deputy Secretary of Energy in the United States; and Lord Ronald Oxburgh, who is a British parliamentarian, member of the House of Lords, a former chairman of Shell and himself a geologist and geophysicist. These ‘technologists’ offer three different perspectives on the topic of ‘good energy policy’. Finally the editors provide the main lessons learned from the book and offer suggestions for future directions of multidisciplinary research in energy policy.

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Chapter
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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References

Grubb, M. and Mills, J. 2014, Factoring strategic and sustainability considerations into energy sector regulation: A case study of developments in the UK Office of Gas and Electricity Markets (Ofgem), Proceedings of the 37th Int. Ass. for Energy Economics Conference, www.usaee.org/usaee2014/submissions/OnlineProceedings/Grubb%20Ofgem%20SSA%20Paper%20for%20IAEE.pdfGoogle Scholar
Robison, R. A. V. and Foulds, C. 2018, Constructing policy success for UK energy feedback, J. Building Research & Information, 46, 316–331.Google Scholar
Shuckburgh, E., Robison, R. and Pidgeon, N. 2012, Climate science, the public and the news media. Summary findings of a survey and focus groups conducted in the UK in March 2011, Living with Environmental Change, http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/500544/1/lwec-climate-science.pdfGoogle Scholar
Geels, F. (2004), ‘From sectoral systems of innovation to socio-technical systems Insights about dynamics and change from sociology and institutional theory’, Research Policy, 33: 897920.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hollyer, J. R., Rosendorff, B. P., and Vreeland, J. R. (2011), ‘Democracy and Transparency’, The Journal of Politics, 73 (4) (1 October 2011): 11911205.Google Scholar
Spreng, D. (2014), ‘Transdisciplinary energy research – Reflecting the context’, Energy Research & Social Science, 1 (March): 6573.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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