Making a Case for Centring Energy Poverty in Social Policy in Light of the Climate Emergency: A Global Integrative Review

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Abstract

The recent polycrises of COVID-19, economic recession, and energy price increases have reinforced the critical importance of energy services - such as heating, information and communications technology, and refrigeration - to everyday societal functioning. Compromising access to these energy services, or energy poverty, limits social and economic development affecting education, health, and social participation. Energy poverty is impacted by climate change and climate-related policies - however, this nexus has been marginalised within social policy. We critically review literature at the intersection of climate change and energy poverty identifying policy approaches, tensions, and solutions of relevance for social policy. While tensions exist between efforts to mitigate climate change and energy poverty, climate-friendly mitigation of energy poverty requires better integration of social perspectives to disrupt current technical biases, recognising the characteristics and needs of individuals in energy poverty, and holistic governance approaches, especially involving the health and housing sectors.

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APA

Stojilovska, A., Thomson, H., & Mejía-Montero, A. (2023). Making a Case for Centring Energy Poverty in Social Policy in Light of the Climate Emergency: A Global Integrative Review. In Social Policy and Society (Vol. 22, pp. 715–729). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1474746423000209

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