!!Benjamin Sovacool - Publications

__STATISTICS__ (as of December 2019)
\\
*22 authored, co-authored, edited or co-edited books
*393 refereed articles\\
*55 book chapters\\
*62 commissioned reports\\
*H-index of 51 (Scopus)\\
*10,553 citations (Scopus) \\
*H-index of 78 (Google Scholar)\\
*i-10 index of 305 (Google Scholar) \\
*22,600 citations (Google Scholar)
\\
__Recent Books:__ \\
\\
Empowering the Great Energy Transition: Policy for a Low-Carbon Future, with Scott V. Valentine and Marilyn A.  Brown (New York: Columbia University Press)\\
\\
Fact and Fiction in Global Energy Policy: Fifteen Contentious Questions, with Marilyn A. Brown and Scott V.  Valentine (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016)\\
\\
__Recent articles__ (* co-authored with one or more other people):
\\
*“The whole systems energy injustice of four European low-carbon transitions,” Global Environmental Change 58  (September, 2019), 101958, pp. 1-15. \\

*“Decarbonisation and its discontents: A critical energy justice perspective on four low-carbon transitions,” Climatic  Change 155(4) (August, 2019), pp. 581–619.\\

*“The demographics of decarbonizing transport: The influence of gender, education, occupation, age, and  household size on electric mobility preferences in the Nordic region,” Global Environmental Change 52  (September, 2018), pp. 86-100.\\

*“Sociotechnical transitions for deep decarbonisation,” Science 357 (6357) (September 22, 2017), pp. 1242-1244.\\

* “Ordering theories: Typologies and conceptual frameworks for sociotechnical change,” Social Studies of Science  47(5) (October, 2017), pp. 703-750.\\

*“Towards a Science of Climate and Energy Choices,” Nature Climate Change 6 (June, 2016), pp.  547-555.\\

*“Energy Decisions Reframed as Justice and Ethical concerns,” Nature Energy 16024 (2016), pp. 1-6.\\

*“The Political Economy of Climate Adaptation,” Nature Climate Change 5 (7) (July, 2015), pp. 616- 618.\\

*“Energy Studies Need Social Science,” Nature 511 (7511) (July 31, 2014), pp. 529-530.\\

*“What Are We Doing Here? Analyzing Fifteen Years of Energy Scholarship and Proposing a Social Science  Research Agenda,” Energy Research & Social Science 1 (March, 2014), pp. 1-29.