scholarly journals Basic Research Needs for Geosciences: Facilitating 21st Century Energy Systems

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. DePaolo ◽  
F. M. Orr ◽  
S. M. Benson ◽  
M. Celia ◽  
A. Felmy ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Fazio ◽  
George Laramore ◽  
Suresh Pillai ◽  
Ahmed Badruzzaman ◽  
Harry Martz ◽  
...  

JOM ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 16-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
James B. Roberto ◽  
Tomas Diaz de la Rubia

2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. McIlroy ◽  
G. McRae ◽  
V. Sick ◽  
D. L. Siebers ◽  
C. K. Westbrook ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-33
Author(s):  
Julie Berg ◽  
Clifford Shearing

The 40th Anniversary Edition of Taylor, Walton and Young’s New Criminology, published in 2013, opened with these words: ‘The New Criminology was written at a particular time and place, it was a product of 1968 and its aftermath; a world turned upside down’. We are at a similar moment today. Several developments have been, and are turning, our 21st century world upside down. Among the most profound has been the emergence of a new earth, that the ‘Anthropocene’ references, and ‘cyberspace’, a term first used in the 1960s, which James Lovelock has recently termed a ‘Novacene’, a world that includes both human and artificial intelligences. We live today on an earth that is proving to be very different to the Holocene earth, our home for the past 12,000 years. To appreciate the Novacene one need only think of our ‘smart’ phones. This world constitutes a novel domain of existence that Castells has conceived of as a terrain of ‘material arrangements that allow for simultaneity of social practices without territorial contiguity’ – a world of sprawling material infrastructures, that has enabled a ‘space of flows’, through which massive amounts of information travel. Like the Anthropocene, the Novacene has brought with it novel ‘harmscapes’, for example, attacks on energy systems. In this paper, we consider how criminology has responded to these harmscapes brought on by these new worlds. We identify ‘lines of flight’ that are emerging, as these challenges are being met by criminological thinkers who are developing the conceptual trajectories that are shaping 21st century criminologies.


Science ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 227 (4693) ◽  
pp. 1446-1446
Author(s):  
M. SUN

2014 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 3-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Urry

Energy forms and their extensive scale are remarkably significant for the ways that societies are organized. This article shows the importance of how societies are ‘energized’ and especially the global growth of ‘fossil fuel societies’. Much social thought remains oblivious to the energy revolution realized over the past two to three centuries which set the ‘West’ onto a distinct trajectory. Energy is troubling for social thought because different energy systems with their ‘lock-ins’ are not subject to simple human intervention and control. Analyses are provided here of different fossil fuel societies, of coal and oil, with the latter enabling the liquid, mobilized 20th century. Consideration is paid to the possibilities of reducing fossil fuel dependence but it is shown how unlikely such a ‘powering down’ will be. The author demonstrates how energy is a massive problem for social theory and for 21st-century societies. Developing post-carbon theory and especially practice is far away but is especially urgent.


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