We forgot half of the population! The significance of gender in Danish energy renovation projects
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We forgot half of the population! The significance of gender in Danish energy renovation projects. / Tjørring, Lise.
In: Energy Research and Social Science, Vol. 22, 2016, p. 115-124.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - We forgot half of the population! The significance of gender in Danish energy renovation projects
AU - Tjørring, Lise
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - Energy renovations are considered to have great potential for reducing the problem of excessive energy consumption. Thus far, initiatives to increase the number of energy renovations have mostly consisted of financial incentives and technical home solutions. Such initiatives overlook the fact that the way people live their everyday lives plays a crucial role in understanding why they choose whether to perform an energy renovation. This study is based on an anthropological investigation of ten Danish families and their decision-making process while receiving free energy advice, which, in many cases, ended as an energy renovation project in the home. During the study, gender emerged as a significant factor in two ways. First, energy renovations were perceived differently by men and women as a consequence of their different everyday practices. Second, there was a cultural norm about the division between what men and women do in the home. This cultural norm placed energy renovation in the male sphere of interest. These findings call for new methods to increase the number of energy renovations that focus on the home, not only as a technical issue that can be improved but also as a living space that contains different gender practices and cultural influences.
AB - Energy renovations are considered to have great potential for reducing the problem of excessive energy consumption. Thus far, initiatives to increase the number of energy renovations have mostly consisted of financial incentives and technical home solutions. Such initiatives overlook the fact that the way people live their everyday lives plays a crucial role in understanding why they choose whether to perform an energy renovation. This study is based on an anthropological investigation of ten Danish families and their decision-making process while receiving free energy advice, which, in many cases, ended as an energy renovation project in the home. During the study, gender emerged as a significant factor in two ways. First, energy renovations were perceived differently by men and women as a consequence of their different everyday practices. Second, there was a cultural norm about the division between what men and women do in the home. This cultural norm placed energy renovation in the male sphere of interest. These findings call for new methods to increase the number of energy renovations that focus on the home, not only as a technical issue that can be improved but also as a living space that contains different gender practices and cultural influences.
KW - Anthropology
KW - Denmark
KW - Energy renovation
KW - Gender
KW - Private household
U2 - 10.1016/j.erss.2016.08.008
DO - 10.1016/j.erss.2016.08.008
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:84988038494
VL - 22
SP - 115
EP - 124
JO - Energy Research & Social Science
JF - Energy Research & Social Science
SN - 2214-6296
ER -
ID: 172476248