Wind, power, and the situatedness of community engagement

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Jeju, an island in Korea, became a place to site wind turbines with an unusually high level of public acceptance. Based on interviews, media analyses, and policy research, we found that the collective memory of socio-economic deprivation enabled community engagement to matter to residents, the provincial government, and environmental activists. It was within socio-historically contextualized processes of articulating the vision of a "good" society that an actual form of community engagement, however inadequate it might appear to some, became relevant to stakeholders in a particular locality. We emphasize that community engagement in renewable energy governance does not have one but multiple and situated ways of mattering depending on local contexts.
Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
Issue Date
2019-01
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

PUBLIC UNDERSTANDING OF SCIENCE, v.28, no.1, pp.38 - 52

ISSN
0963-6625
DOI
10.1177/0963662518772508
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/250207
Appears in Collection
RIMS Journal Papers
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