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| + | ====== Institutional Change ====== | ||
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| + | ===== Investigating institutional changes (conceptual) [Rohde and Hielscher 2021] ===== | ||
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| + | "Smart grid developments call for a change of existing institutions and institutional arrangements (i.e. overarching rules and requirements such as regulations and standards) [23] within the electricity sector. Due to these changes, organisations have to undergo several adaptation processes, which could potentially hugely influence their day-to-day operations, collaborations with other actors and business models [e.g. 12,38]. However, organisations do not have to accept these changes without at least some resistance. They can actively attempt to shape negotiations and new role allocations within these developments [38]. To be able to examine these institutional changes, we draw on new institutionalism. At the centre of this conceptual approach are questions that examine the way organisations respond to institutional pressures [44], the varying institutions that structure an organisational field [21] and the ways in which different organisations influence (and are influenced by) institutional changes [22,45,46]. We make use of the following three concepts: a) **organisational field** [47], b) pillars of institutions [23] and c) **institutional work** [24] to analyse how institutionalised rules are challenged through current smart grid developments and how organisational actors attempt to influence efforts to advance smart grid developments." | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | [Source: Rohde, Friederike, and Sabine Hielscher. ‘Smart Grids and Institutional Change: Emerging Contestations between Organisations over Smart Energy Transitions’. Energy Research & Social Science 74 (April 2021): 101974. https:// | ||
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| + | ===== Institutional changes in Smart Grid Transition [Rohde and Hielscher 2021] ===== | ||
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| + | **The paper concludes: | ||
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| + | Country specific empirical findings - Germany " | ||
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| + | **Generalized conclusions: | ||
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| + | "The heterogeneity of organisations ’ aims, interests and belief systems, as highlighted by our examination of institutional work, are key to understandingwhy smart grid developments lag behind initial expectations. The **rules** (e.g. who gets access to the market) and **roles** (e.g. who should handle the data and/or who should manage grid flexibility) **in future smart grids are not clearly defined** and thus highly contested among the organisations. The **struggle is much more about** an **individual organisation’s interests** than about a wider governmental and/or public debate [66] **as to what constitutes a smart grid, the main purpose** it should serve and how it could be organised." | ||
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| + | " | ||
| + | To go beyond the pilot stage in smart grid developments, | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | [Source: Rohde, Friederike, and Sabine Hielscher. ‘Smart Grids and Institutional Change: Emerging Contestations between Organisations over Smart Energy Transitions’. Energy Research & Social Science 74 (April 2021): 101974. https:// | ||
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| + | ===== Institutional Work (conceptual) [Rohde and Hielscher 2021]===== | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | {{:: | ||
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| + | {{:: | ||
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| + | [Source: Rohde, Friederike, and Sabine Hielscher. ‘Smart Grids and Institutional Change: Emerging Contestations between Organisations over Smart Energy Transitions’. Energy Research & Social Science 74 (April 2021): 101974. https:// | ||
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| + | ===== Institutional Work (conceptual) [Möllering and Müller-Seitz 2018]===== | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | {{:: | ||
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| + | "four practices of institutional work in the face of uncertainty": | ||
| + | - " | ||
| + | - **roadmapping** (i.e., defining future technological milestones), | ||
| + | - **leader-picking** (i.e., using and reinforcing momentum), and | ||
| + | - **issue-bracketing** (i.e., excluding or postponing topics)." | ||
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| + | [Source: Möllering, Guido, and Gordon Müller-Seitz. ‘Direction, | ||
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