Cristin-resultat-ID: 1288122
Sist endret: 17. februar 2017, 13:46
NVI-rapporteringsår: 2015
Resultat
Vitenskapelig artikkel
2015

The role of (de-)essentialisation within siting conflicts: An interdisciplinary approach

Bidragsytere:
  • Susana Batel
  • Patrick Devine-Wright
  • Line Camilla Wold
  • Helene Egeland
  • Gerd Blindheim Jacobsen og
  • Øystein Aas

Tidsskrift

Journal of Environmental Psychology
ISSN 0272-4944
e-ISSN 1522-9610
NVI-nivå 2

Om resultatet

Vitenskapelig artikkel
Publiseringsår: 2015
Publisert online: 2015
Trykket: 2015
Volum: 44
Sider: 149 - 159
Open Access

Importkilder

Scopus-ID: 2-s2.0-84946542887

Klassifisering

Vitenskapsdisipliner

Samfunnsgeografi

Beskrivelse Beskrivelse

Tittel

The role of (de-)essentialisation within siting conflicts: An interdisciplinary approach

Sammendrag

Large-scale renewable energy and associated technologies (RET), such as high voltage power lines (HVPL), often meet opposition from the local communities living nearby. Research has suggested that one of the main aspects that might contribute to this is the fact that RET are represented as industrial and urban, and thus, as having a different essence from rural landscapes, where they are usually deployed and which are represented as natural and unspoilt. However, this ‘hypothesis’ of landscape essentialisation shaping people’s responses to RET has not been explicitly examined. By drawing upon research from Social Psychology and Human Geography on essentialisation, we will examine if and how landscape (de-)essentialisation plays a role in people’s responses to RET. Namely, by examining it as a rhetorical construction that can be strategically used to negotiate and legitimize given relations with place and associated responses to RET. Focus groups were conducted in the UK and Norway with members of local communities to be affected by the construction of HVPLs that will connect to new low carbon energy technologies. Analyses show that participants present British and Norwegian rural landscapes in general and HVPL as having two different essences, which justifies opposition to those infrastructures. However, analyses also show that essentialisation of the countryside is strategically used. Namely, participants also present the countryside in the place where they live as having more of the essence of the British or Norwegian countryside than other areas of the UK and Norway. In turn, this allows them to legitimize claims that whereas HVPL are ‘out of place’ in the countryside in general, they are more so in the place where they live. The implications of these results for the definition of acceptable locations for RET and for research on people-place relations and responses to place change, are discussed.

Bidragsytere

Susana Batel

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Universidade de Lisboa
  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved University of Exeter

Patrick Devine-Wright

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved University of Exeter

Line Camilla Wold

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved NINA Lillehammer ved Norsk institutt for naturforskning

Helene Egeland

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Termisk energi ved SINTEF Energi AS

Gerd Blindheim Jacobsen

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Termisk energi ved SINTEF Energi AS
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