Video: Mark Harvey on Food, Energy & Climate Change
Mark Harvey introduces his article ‘The Food-Energy-Climate Change Trilemma: Toward a Socio-Economic Analysis‘ from the TCS Special Issue on Energy & Society
Abstract
The food-energy-climate change trilemma refers to the stark alternatives presented by the need to feed a world population growing to nine billion, the attendant risks of land conversion and use for global climate change, and the way these are interconnected with the energy crisis arising from the depletion of oil. Theorizing the interactions between political economies and their related natural environments, in terms of both finitudes of resources and generation of greenhouse gases, presents a major challenge to social sciences. Approaches from classical political economy, transition theory, economic geography, and political ecology, are reviewed before elaborating the neo-Polanyian approach adopted here. The case of Brazil, analysed with an `instituted economic process’ framework, demonstrates how the trilemma is a spatial and historical socio-economic phenomenon, varying significantly in its dynamics in different environmental and resource contexts. The paper concludes by highlighting challenges to developing a social scientific theory in this field.
TCS Special Issue: Energy & Society
Volume 31 Issue 5, September 2014
Edited by David Tyfield and John Urry
Contents
The Problem of Energy
John Urry
Regime Resistance against Low-Carbon Transitions: Introducing Politics and Power into the Multi-Level Perspective
Frank W Geels
What Is Energy For? Social Practice and Energy Demand
Elizabeth Shove and Gordon Walker
The Political and Material Landscape of European Energy Distribution: Tracking the Oil Road
James Marriott and Mika Minio-Paluello
The United States and Alternative Energies since 1980: Technological Fix or Regime Change?
David E Nye
Global Energy Cultures of Speed and Lightness: Materials, Mobilities and Transnational Power
Mimi Sheller
The Food-Energy-Climate Change Trilemma: Toward a Socio-Economic Analysis
Mark Harvey
Visioning a Sustainable Energy Future: The Case of Urban Food-Growing
Robert Biel
Combustion and Society: A Fire-Centred History of Energy Use
Nigel Clark and Kathryn Yusoff