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Capital and Carbon: The Shifting Common Good Justification of Energy Regimes

Thomas D. Beamish
Nicole Woolsey Biggart

Justification, Evaluation and Critique in the Study of Organizations

ISBN: 978-1-78714-380-7, eISBN: 978-1-78714-379-1

ISSN: 0733-558X

Publication date: 1 June 2017

Abstract

This article traces the regimes of worth that defined energy for centuries as a productive force of human and animal labor, an understanding that transformed in the 18th century to an “industrial-energy” regime of worth supporting an economy of mass production, consumption, and profit and more recently one centered on market forces and price. Industrial and market energy and the conventions and institutions that support them are currently in a period of discursive and material ferment; they are being challenged by different higher order principles of worth. We discuss eight emergent energy justifications that argue what kind of energy is – and is not – in the best interests of society.

Keywords

  • Orders of worth
  • Regime
  • Capital
  • Energy
  • Modernity
  • Justification

Citation

Beamish, T.D. and Biggart, N.W. (2017), "Capital and Carbon: The Shifting Common Good Justification of Energy Regimes", Justification, Evaluation and Critique in the Study of Organizations (Research in the Sociology of Organizations, Vol. 52), Emerald Publishing Limited, pp. 173-205. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0733-558X20170000052006

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017 Emerald Publishing Limited

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