Message posted on 08/03/2020

CfP: Workshop on Energy Systems and Changing Values

                Apologies for cross-posting.
<br>
<br>_______________________
<br>
<br>Dear Colleagues,
<br>
<br>We invite contributions to a workshop on Energy Systems and Changing Values to
<br>be held from 15 to 17 October 2020 in Delft, The Netherlands. People
<br>interested in contributing to the workshop are requested to submit a 300-word
<br>abstract to info@valuechange.eu  before 1 June 2020. On the basis of a
<br>selection of the contributions to the workshop, we will compose a special
<br>issue of the journal Science, Technology & Human Values. A limited number of
<br>travel stipends will be available for graduate students who face financial
<br>constraints, but who are willing to participate and whose abstracts are
<br>accepted. We especially encourage candidates from underrepresented groups to
<br>apply.
<br>
<br>
<br>Warm regards,
<br>
<br>Anna Melnyk
<br>
<br>
<br>_______________________________________________
<br>
<br>Workshop on Energy Systems and Changing Values, TU Delft, The Netherlands, 15
<br>- 17 October 2020
<br>
<br>
<br>WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION
<br>
<br>Energy Systems and Changing Values
<br>In many parts of the world, the need for a transition to more sustainable
<br>energy systems is felt. It is obvious that the energy transition is a
<br>technical and economic process, but it also requires changes in institutions
<br>and values. Values that play a role in energy transition include energy
<br>efficiency; sustainability and other environmental values; security and
<br>reliability; social justice and fairness; autonomy and power; safety; privacy,
<br>aesthetics and landscape embedding. These values are not static but change
<br>over time; for example because a value may become less or more important.
<br>Sustainability was, for example, given less emphasis when the current energy
<br>systems were designed compared to the current energy transition. Another value
<br>that seems to gain in importance, due to a transition to more decentralized
<br>energy generation and the advance of community energy systems, is energy
<br>autarky. Another shape that value change can take is the emergence of new
<br>values. For example, energy justice and energy democracy have emerged as new
<br>values in the last decade in relation to the energy transition.
<br>
<br>Addressing value change is particularly important because energy systems have
<br>large technological and institutional momentum while they are often socially
<br>contested. The technological and institutional momentum implies that these
<br>systems are often hard to change; technical infrastructures are usually built
<br>for decades; and also institutional rules cannot be changed overnight. This
<br>makes it more difficult and costly to deal with value change. At the same
<br>time, the socially contested character of many energy technologies makes it
<br>not only crucial to properly address values for the ethical acceptability and
<br>social acceptance of these systems, but makes it also likely that new values
<br>will emerge in public debates about energy technologies. So while value change
<br>may be endemic in energy systems, these systems at the same time have
<br>characteristics that make it harder to deal with such value change.
<br>
<br>Value change in energy systems can be studied at different levels and from
<br>different angles, including, but not necessarily limited to, 1) changes in
<br>values among energy consumers and the general public, 2) changes in values of
<br>energy producers and grid operators, 3) changes in values implied by different
<br>energy technologies, 4) changes in values implied by different institutional
<br>and organizational arrangements for the production, distribution and
<br>consumption of energy, and the relations between these four.
<br>
<br>CONFIRMED SPEAKERS
<br>
<br>Rafaela Hillerbrand (Professor of Philosophy of Engineering, Technology
<br>Assessment, and Science at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)
<br>Martin Petersen (Professor of Philosophy and Bovay Professor of the History
<br>and Ethics of Professional Engineering at Texas A&M University)
<br>Benjamin Sovacool (Professor of Energy Policy at the Science Policy Research
<br>Unit (SPRU) at the University of Sussex)
<br>
<br>CALL FOR PAPERS
<br>
<br>We invite contributions to a workshop on Energy Systems and Changing Values to
<br>be held from 15 to 17 October 2020 in Delft, The Netherlands. On the basis of
<br>a selection of the contributions to the workshop, we will compose a special
<br>issue of the journal Science, Technology & Human Values. A limited number of
<br>travel stipends will be available for graduate students who face financial
<br>constraints, but who are willing to participate and whose abstracts are
<br>accepted. We especially encourage candidates from underrepresented groups to
<br>apply.
<br>
<br>Specific topics that could be addressed for the workshop include:
<br>     How can we conceptually and theoretically understand value change in the
<br>energy sector?
<br>     What are important historical value changes in the energy domain?
<br>     What methods are available for describing and analyzing value change in
<br>the energy domain?
<br>     What are the implications of value change for the design and governance
<br>of energy systems?
<br>     How are we to interpret the emergence of new values like energy justice
<br>and energy democracy?
<br>     What values are implied by different energy technologies? How do
<br>(changing) values play out in the design of different energy technologies?
<br>     How do values and institutional structures mutually shape each other in
<br>the energy sector?
<br>     Do value changes in the energy sector lead to new value tensions and
<br>what are possible ways of dealing with such value tensions?
<br>But other questions that fit the general theme are welcome as well.
<br>
<br>ABSTRACT & PAPER SUBMISSIONS
<br>
<br>People interested in contributing to the workshop are requested to submit a
<br>300-word  abstract to info@valuechange.eu  before 1 June 2020. You will be
<br>notified before 1 July whether you are selected for inclusion in the workshop.
<br>We expect to be able to select around 15 papers.
<br>
<br>Selected authors are requested to send a draft paper of 3000 to 5000 words
<br>before 1 September 2020. At the workshop, we will discuss the draft papers of
<br>the various contributors. After the workshop, we will invite a selection of
<br>the contributions for a special issue of Science, Technology & Human Values.
<br>
<br>PRACTICAL INFORMATION
<br>
<br>The workshop will take place at the campus of Delft University of Technology,
<br>The Netherlands. There is no registration fee. Information about the workshop
<br>venue, hotel bookings and other practical questions will be published soon.
<br>
<br>The workshop is part of the project ValueChange that has received funding from
<br>the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020
<br>research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 788321. See:
<br>https://www.valuechange.eu/
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