This volume presents a much-needed rethinking and proposes a more
nuanced, inclusive, and capacious approach to energy ethics that will
help us grapple with some of the most pressing issues of our time.
- The contributors demonstrate how ethics emerge through people's
everyday thoughts and practices, whether they work in renewables,
nuclear, or fossil fuels; whether they work in industry, policy, or
advocacy; whether they produce, distribute, or consume energy
- It shows how to create an analytical space in which we can attend to
people's own experiences and evaluations without uncritically imposing
judgements of how we would like the world to be
- By attending to the broader political and economic contexts in which
these everyday energy encounters take place, this volume draws
attention to the plurality and complexity that characterises the
multiple and overlapping 'ethical worlds' in which we, our
interlocutors, and other beings participate