19. Soul searching the flexibility concept
Sessions
Beyond crisis/Beyond normal
A social science and humanities conference on sustainability
Organized by NTNU Energy Team Society
27 and 28 September 2023 | DIGS (pdf), Trondheim |
Registration deadline: 15 August
Thematic sessions
The conference has the following thematic sessions:
Date: 27 September
Time: 10.15 - 12.00
Program
10.15: William Throndsen: Introduction
10.20: Mikkel Vindegg: Bringing the smart grid home: Nuancing smart energy technologies’ potential for balancing Norway’s grid capacity
10.30: Tineke Van Der Schoor: Local and flexible; three case studies of innovative community energy services.
10.40: Ingrid Christensen: Demand-side management and transaction costs: An institutional perspective on flexibility capital
11.00: Break
11:10: Aggeliki Aggeli: An intersectionality framework for energy flexibility of European households
11:20: Outi Pitkänen: To whom is end-user flexibility relevant and what are its limits?
11:30: Ida Marie Henriksen: Flexibility mobility: Can a garage become a flexible hub?
11.40: Joint discussion on what to make out of flexible electricity consumption (William moderates)
11:55: Summing up and ending (deliver post-its with questions/comments either directly to the presenters or to the marked boxes)
Format: Presentation
Time frame: 6-8 minutes + questions
Flexibility of electricity consumption is considered by many a resource that can be collected, be it from households, work-life, or mobility. Flexibility as a concept in social science research could be understood as part of what Zygmund Bauman’s Liquid Modernity, as it contributes to global societal structures becoming more interconnected. At the same time work is ongoing to effectuate an energy transition by integrating more renewable energy sources, interconnecting ever more global grids to markets and geopolitics. Here, end use consumption patterns is constituted as a liquid resource for the techno people that do not connected it to either to time nor place and the social structure we live our life after.
In this workshop we wish to delve into the concept of flexibility and related themes such as flexibility capital (and poverty), flexible genders and families, and flexible mobility, in order to come to terms with what is the role of this concept in the energy transition.
We welcome abstracts that deal with flexibility as concept and how to understand flexibility from different inroads of social science and humanities energy related research. For example:
- End user perspectives
- Grid perspectives
- Political imaginaries
- Flexibility as society diagnosis.
- ICBO – It could be otherwise. Do we need flexibility?
- Flexibility as class concept
- Prosumer capitalism
Join us for a session of academic souls searching about how we as social scientists relate to flexibility as concept, how we research it, and how flexibility is becoming part of society. Topics both theoretical and methodological are welcome.
Organizers
Ida Marie Henriksen, Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture
Outi Pitkänen, Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture
William Throndsen, Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture
Contact: Ida Marie Henriksen
Poster session
The conference will also have an open poster session where participants are invited to present any sustainability related social science and humanities research. Guidelines for poster and poster presentation (pdf).
Trans-local justice challenges of electric vehicle supply chains - Tensions and imaginaries of the Tesla Gigafactory Berlin-Brandenburg
Shifting geographies of decarbonization: Gas for me but not for thee?
The Role of Digitalization in Shaping a Sustainable Future for the Built environment
The sound of energy transitions. An ethnographic case.
The EU-support for the Swedish steel industry. How just is the just transition fund?
(Re)gaining Ecological Futures in Kochi, India - an immersive fieldwork experience
The rebound effect of shared-mobility in urban planning perspective: State of the art
Automated vehicle governance in Norway: process, object, or system?
Uncertainty as the new normal: Towards contextualised contrigency planning during unprecedented flooding in Wayanad, India
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems and the emergence of Knowledge-Intensive Social Entrepreneurship: evidence from Brazil
Methylmercury in the Food Chain due to Global Ubiquitous Atmospheric Deposition from Coal Combustion
Handling Compounded uncertainty in spatial planning and humanitarian action in unexpected floods in wayananda, Kerala
Global sustainability impacts of offshore wind and solar PV diffusion
Food waste in the Danish wholesale sector: Empirical basis and suggested solutions
Building stakeholder coalitions in the sustainable transition of everyday consumption
Reducing food waste across the food supply chain requires novel cross-sectoral understandings of quality parameters
Playing, doing, thinking, arguing, working, walking: call for alternative format sessions
The conference will also allocate one timeslot for parallel sessions using alternative formats. We welcome workshops, activities, co-creation exercises, innovative discussions, brainstorming formats, and whatever other creative initiatives you can come up with.
Beyond crises/Beyond Normal acknowledges that grappling with the key challenges of our era requires creative engagement beyond standard knowledge production and sharing through academic presentations. We will therefore allocate one timeslot for parallel sessions using alternative formats.
We welcome workshops, activities, co-creation exercises, innovative discussions, brainstorming formats, and whatever other creative initiatives you can come up with. The only condition is that activities should be clearly engaging with or be relevant for researchers working on themes of sustainability, climate change, transitions, and energy from a social science or humanities perspective.
While we are open to any good idea that offers an alternative to the conventional panel of paper presentations, we suggest keeping to the following guidelines:
- The session should require little or no preparation from the audience/participants. People should be able to decide to join on the spot.
- The session's success should not depend on the number of participants. Design your session such that it can be successful with 5 persons as well as with 30.
- Allow for both active and passive participation. Allowing mere spectators is likely to be more inclusive as not everyone may want to be ‘on stage’. At the same time, of course make active participation as attractive as you can.
- The activity should be concluded in 90 minutes. Also, mind that the venue will not allow for extensive preparation of the rooms.
- Make clear whether you want this to be an academic exercise, or something that welcomes audience of any kind
- Have an idea for a side-event, an outdoors event, a field trip, an evening event, or any other activity? Do not hesitate to reach out, and we will happily discuss and help!
Describe your plan for the session in 200-300 words. Also describe specific needs for the session (but bear in mind that anything beyond a conference room with AV equipment might be difficult for us to arrange).
Alternative format sessions
The climate fresk workshop
SSH meets society
Tender Cartographies: Mapping felt experiences of place in transition times
Non-Violent Direct Action Training Session with Scientist Rebellion Trondheim
Imaginative and anticipatory co-creation for transformation – pros, cons and unknowns (collective sharing and brainstorming)
Identifying Sustainable Development Goal interlinkages: the case of solar photovoltaics
Organizing committee
-
Kim-Andre Myhre Arntsen PhD Candidate
+4790867311 kim.a.m.arntsen@ntnu.no Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture -
Shaua Fui Chen PhD Candidate
+47-73559959 shaua.f.chen@ntnu.no Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture -
Zane Datava PhD student
+4794277524 zane.datava@ntnu.no -
Franziska Gehlmann PhD student
franziska.gehlmann@ntnu.no -
Sara Heidenreich Senior researcher
+47-73591779 sara.heidenreich@ntnu.no Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture -
Sigurd Hilmo Lundheim
sigurd.h.lundheim@ntnu.no Department of Sociology and Political Science -
Tomas Moe Skjølsvold Professor of STS and Director of FME NTRANS
+47-73550189 +4793634270 tomas.skjolsvold@ntnu.no Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture