Abstract
Based upon extensive multi-archival research, this article traces the long lineage of the notion of European electricity network. Since the 1930s engineers and policy makers conceived of a geographical conception for rationalising and optimising electricity supply: a European one. This article purports that three vectors undergirded threads of continuity: institutional, intellectual and physical (technological networks). These vectors, and the actors involved in them, created strong path dependencies that kept the idea of a European system firmly on the agenda. Today's international electricity market of the European Union should be seen as an extension of this legacy.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Lagendijk, V. (2018). Ideas, individuals and institutions: Notion and practices of a European electricity system. Contemporary European History, 27(2), 202–220. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0960777318000115
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