Abstract
Geographers tend to see energy systems as intricately interwoven with society and relatively resistant to change. We argue that there is a danger of exaggerating the permanence and stability of the energy–society relationship. Therefore we propose a framework that is more open to instability and transformation. Using assemblage theory, we frame the social and material landscapes of oil – carbonscapes – as having emergent capacities for change built into their relations of exteriority. We illustrate this by discussing instabilities at particular points within the global oil production network: extractive hot zones, energy distribution infrastructures, and urban spaces of consumption and practice.
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CITATION STYLE
Haarstad, H., & Wanvik, T. I. (2017). Carbonscapes and beyond. Progress in Human Geography, 41(4), 432–450. https://doi.org/10.1177/0309132516648007
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