Chad Walker, Ph.D.

Research - Teaching - Impact

Scale, history and justice in community wind energy: An empirical review


Journal article


Jamie Baxter, Chad Walker, Geraint Ellis, Patrick Devine-Wright, Michelle Adams, Romayne Smith Fullerton
Energy research and social science, vol. 68, 2020 Aug 30

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APA   Click to copy
Baxter, J., Walker, C., Ellis, G., Devine-Wright, P., Adams, M., & Fullerton, R. S. (2020). Scale, history and justice in community wind energy: An empirical review. Energy Research and Social Science, 68.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Baxter, Jamie, Chad Walker, Geraint Ellis, Patrick Devine-Wright, Michelle Adams, and Romayne Smith Fullerton. “Scale, History and Justice in Community Wind Energy: An Empirical Review.” Energy research and social science 68 (August 30, 2020).


MLA   Click to copy
Baxter, Jamie, et al. “Scale, History and Justice in Community Wind Energy: An Empirical Review.” Energy Research and Social Science, vol. 68, Aug. 2020.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{jamie2020a,
  title = {Scale, history and justice in community wind energy: An empirical review},
  year = {2020},
  month = aug,
  day = {30},
  journal = {Energy research and social science},
  volume = {68},
  author = {Baxter, Jamie and Walker, Chad and Ellis, Geraint and Devine-Wright, Patrick and Adams, Michelle and Fullerton, Romayne Smith},
  month_numeric = {8}
}

 Although there is a clear positive link between community wind energy (CWE) projects and social acceptance, there is still empirical and conceptual ambiguity concerning the details of why. To fill this gap, we revisit foundational papers in this field and then, focusing on empirical case studies between 2010 and 2018 (n = 15), trace how recent research has engaged with existing conceptual frameworks. Most empirical researchers verify the importance of the two key dimensions defined by Walker & Devine-Wright [1]: process and outcome, and then relate this to procedural justice and distributive justice. Meanwhile, the core concept of “community” has been deployed, in both practice and research, in so many different and sometimes ambiguous ways that it remains difficult to assert if, and how, community-based renewable energy policy and siting practice produces high levels of local community acceptance. We suggest that parsing out the scale of investment in wind energy projects and the local historical context of energy transitions add clarity to the Walker & Devine-Wright framework as it relates to CWE; providing important conceptual nuance for guiding policy, developer practices and future empirical research. 
Online presentation - May 2020 MISTRAL Symposium