• Title/Summary/Keyword: 에너지 시티즌십

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The State of Scientific Citizenship in Korea: Centered on the analysis of the citizen's perception survey on the science and technology (한국사회에서 과학기술 시티즌십의 현주소와 전망: <과학기술에 대한 시민의식 조사> 결과 분석을 중심으로)

  • Kang, Yun Jae;Kim, Ji Yeon;Park, Jin Hee;Lee, Young Hee;Chung, In Kyung
    • Journal of Science and Technology Studies
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    • v.15 no.1
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    • pp.3-43
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    • 2015
  • This essay aims to search for the general tendency and characteristics of scientific citizenship, expert knowledge power, and governance in Korea, followed by the analysis of the citizen's perception survey on science and technology. Also, based on the analysis, we try to outline the state of scientific citizenship, and prospect its future. For this purpose, firstly, we choose 11 issues among 13 issues, categorize them into five sub-fields, such as reproduction technologies, nuclear power, climate change and energy, food risk, and information and communication, and analyze them. Consequently, we can pick out six general tendencies and characteristics of scientific citizenship, expert knowledge power, and governance in Korea. To sum up, we try to look ahead the future of scientific citizenship in Korea.

Critical Issues of Energy Democracy and the Possibility of Energy Commons (에너지 민주주의의 쟁점과 에너지 커먼즈의 가능성)

  • Deok Hwa Hong
    • The Journal of Learner-Centered Curriculum and Instruction (JLCCI)
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.75-105
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    • 2019
  • As energy transition accelerates and transition politics intensifies, the strategy and pathway of energy transition are becoming an issue. And there is a growing interest in energy democracy as a discourse criticizing market-led energy transition and seeking fundamental restructuring of energy system. However, the imaginations of energy democracy are different from each other as a social movement discourse and a criterion for political evaluation of energy transition. This study aims to analyze the issues of energy democracy and reinterpret them from the perspective of the Commons. As various social movements are connected, energy democracy includes elements of localization, decentralization, liberalization, commoning and socialization that can conflict with each other in terms of transition strategy. In addition, the imagination of the subject of energy transition is diverging between investors, consumers, workers, and energy citizens. Thinking about energy infrastructure as the Commons in this situation helps to understand the critical issues of energy democracy and to imagine new transition experiments. Energy democracy implies that the new commons are being created across the scale of energy infrastructure in the contention of the transition to a decentralized renewable energy system.