Landscapes - People - Global change

Tag: energy landscape

New paper: Q-method for rural large-scale solar

Last week a paper led by Emily Key (Snair), recent MES alumna, came out in Energy Research & Social Science, with her Dutch committee member Dirk Oudes (Wageningen) and I as co-authors. The paper,  Integrate and embrace or isolate and hide? Using Q-method to understand how to incorporate large-scale solar in rural Nova Scotia, Canada, is open access. This study doesn’t ask whether we should have large-scale solar (LSS), but how. Emily used Q-methodology, a statement-sorting methodology, with interviews, to identify discourses around LSS in rural Nova Scotia towns that have a range of experience with the technology. The two key discourses that emerged connect to some common debates in the literature around landscape management (see below). This allowed her to suggest important questions that should be discussed with communities being considered for LSS, questions that might be useful for lots of other sustainability transitions as well. Congratulations, Emily!

Culturomics on the horizon

Conservation culturomics is one of this year's emerging issues.

Conservation culturomics is one of this year’s emerging issues.

I drove in this slippery morning listening to the Smiths, turning off my car during Some Girls are Bigger Than Others. It’s still in my head, but now I’m hearing “some cites are better than others”. Earlier this week I saw that our Mactaquac ‘flocus group’ work was cited in an interesting new article by Susana Batel engaging critically with social acceptance of energy literature. Bummer, then, to see our paper reported as case work from Nevada, USA, instead of New Brunswick, Canada! Improving my mood, this morning, our culturomics commentary in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment on the potential of images in culturomics was one of five cited in the ninth annual ‘horizon scan’ of emerging issues for global conservation and biological diversity in Trends in Ecology & Evolution to support the growing importance of conservation culturomics. Some citations are truly better than others.

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