Book - Cambridge University Press
The Politics of Shale Gas in Eastern Europe: Energy Security, Contested Technologies and the Social Licence to Frack
Fracking is a novel but contested energy technology – so what makes some countries embrace it whilst others reject it? This book argues that the reason for policy divergence lies in procedures and processes, stakeholder inclusion and whether a strong narrative underpins governmental policies. Based on a large set of primary data gathered in Poland, Bulgaria and Romania, it explores shale gas policies in Central Eastern Europe (a region strongly dependent on Russian gas imports) to unveil the importance of policy regimes for creating a 'social license' for fracking. Its findings suggest that technology transfer does not happen in a vacuum but is subject to close mutual interaction with political, economic and social forces; and that national energy policy is not a matter of 'objective' policy imperatives, such as Russian import dependence, but a function of complex domestic dynamics pertaining to institutional procedures and processes, and winners and losers.
- Based on the findings of a 2-year research project funded by a European Commission's Marie Curie Fellowship within the 7th European Community Framework Programme
- Advances the ongoing debate on energy policy in Central Eastern Europe and contributes to the literature on policies pertaining to technology transfer, using shale gas as a critical case
- Sheds light on the socio-economic dimension of fracking, and what it takes to generate a 'social license'
- Readers will understand what is required for fracking technology to take hold beyond the US, and to make shale 'go global'
About This Book
The Politics of Shale Gas in Eastern Europe: Energy Security, Contested Technologies and the Social Licence to Frack
For more information on this publication:
Belfer Communications Office
For Academic Citation:
Goldthau, Andreas. The Politics of Shale Gas in Eastern Europe: Energy Security, Contested Technologies and the Social Licence to Frack. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, May 2018.
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Fracking is a novel but contested energy technology – so what makes some countries embrace it whilst others reject it? This book argues that the reason for policy divergence lies in procedures and processes, stakeholder inclusion and whether a strong narrative underpins governmental policies. Based on a large set of primary data gathered in Poland, Bulgaria and Romania, it explores shale gas policies in Central Eastern Europe (a region strongly dependent on Russian gas imports) to unveil the importance of policy regimes for creating a 'social license' for fracking. Its findings suggest that technology transfer does not happen in a vacuum but is subject to close mutual interaction with political, economic and social forces; and that national energy policy is not a matter of 'objective' policy imperatives, such as Russian import dependence, but a function of complex domestic dynamics pertaining to institutional procedures and processes, and winners and losers.
- Based on the findings of a 2-year research project funded by a European Commission's Marie Curie Fellowship within the 7th European Community Framework Programme
- Advances the ongoing debate on energy policy in Central Eastern Europe and contributes to the literature on policies pertaining to technology transfer, using shale gas as a critical case
- Sheds light on the socio-economic dimension of fracking, and what it takes to generate a 'social license'
- Readers will understand what is required for fracking technology to take hold beyond the US, and to make shale 'go global'
About This Book
- Recommended
- In the Spotlight
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News - Harvard Project on Climate Agreements
HPCA at COP 28
Audio - Harvard Environmental Economics Program
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