Article ID: CBB350275299

Sociotechnical imaginaries of low-carbon waste-energy futures: UK techno-market fixes displacing public accountability (August 2020)

unapi

Levidow, Les (Author)
Sujatha Raman (Author)


Social Studies of Science
Volume: 50
Issue: 4
Pages: 609-641


Publication Date: August 2020
Edition Details: Sociotechnical imaginaries: An accidental themed issue
Language: English

To implement EU climate policy, the UK’s New Labour government (1997–2010) elaborated an ecomodernist policy framework. It promoted technological innovation to provide low-carbon renewable energy, especially by treating waste as a resource. This framework discursively accommodated rival sociotechnical imaginaries, understood as visions of feasible and desirable futures available through technoscientific development. According to the dominant imaginary, techno-market fixes stimulate low-carbon technologies by making current centralized systems more resource-efficient (as promoted by industry incumbents). According to the alternative eco-localization imaginary, a shift to low-carbon systems should instead localize resource flows, output uses and institutional responsibility (as promoted by civil society groups). The UK government policy framework gained political authority by accommodating both imaginaries. As we show by drawing on three case studies, the realization of both imaginaries depended on institutional changes and material-economic resources of distinctive kinds. In practice, financial incentives drove technological design towards trajectories that favour the dominant sociotechnical imaginary, while marginalizing the eco-localization imaginary and its environmental benefits. The ecomodernist policy framework relegates responsibility to anonymous markets, thus displacing public accountability of the state and industry. These dynamics indicate the need for STS research on how alternative sociotechnical imaginaries mobilize support for their realization, rather than be absorbed into the dominant imaginary.

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Article Sergio Sismondo (August 2020) Sociotechnical imaginaries: An accidental themed issue. Social Studies of Science (pp. 505-507). unapi

Citation URI
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Authors & Contributors
Pierce, John C.
Noam Bergman
Maxime Polleri
Steel, Brett S.
Debbie Hopkins
Friedman, Robert
Journals
Social Studies of Science
Science, Technology and Human Values
Comparative Technology Transfer and Society
IEEE Technology and Society Magazine
Transfers
Technology and Culture
Publishers
University of Chicago Press
Concepts
Energy resources and technologies
Renewable Energy Sources
Technoscience; science and technology studies
Imaginaries
Technology and politics
Public policy
Time Periods
21st century
20th century, late
Places
United States
Great Britain
Virgin Islands (U.S.)
Western states (U.S.)
Puerto Rico
Sweden
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