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Power Lines

The Human Costs of American Energy in Transition

On American energy and its persisting power to destroy.

In the United States, the promise of a green-energy future is complicated by its realities. The country’s legacy energy systems are decrepit; the rollout of new technologies is unequal and piecemeal; households find themselves increasingly without reliable or affordable access; and Americans are excluded from the decisions that shape their energy futures. Having power in America has become an exercise in race, class, and wealth—in more ways than one.

Power Lines is a sweeping portrait of American energy in the twenty-first century, rendered in terms of its increasing—and inevitable—human costs. Coal miners in West Virginia lose their livelihoods as energy markets change; historically marginalized households cannot easily access new technologies; children in “sacrifice zones” adjacent to mineral-mining sites suffer health problems and limited resources; and cities and towns are burdened from the production of alternative energies.

Sanya Carley and David Konisky show current challenges and an uncertain future of America’s greatest policy imperative. The result is not only sobering but also essential for planning and pursuing a clean-energy transition that improves on the errors of the past.


336 pages | 8 halftones | 6 x 9

Earth Sciences: Environment

Economics and Business: Economics--Agriculture and Natural Resources

Political Science: Public Policy

Sociology: Social Change, Social Movements, Political Sociology

Table of Contents

Preface

1. An American Injustice
2. Sacrifice Zones
3. Beaten, Broken, Forgotten
4. Life Without Energy
5. Where New Technologies Don’t Go
6. Backyards and Ballots
7. The Life Cycle of an Injustice
8. The Uneasy, Uneven Future

Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index

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