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Ethnographic study of energy use in an office setting: Exploring the interactional role of energy

Bell, Lorraine M. and Summerville, Jennifer A. and Buys, Laurie (2006) Ethnographic study of energy use in an office setting: Exploring the interactional role of energy. In Proceedings Social Change in the 21st Century Conference 2006, Carseldine QUT, Brisbane.

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Abstract

Energy, or electricity, plays a significant role in everyday human and technology interactions. Yet to date, research has not considered the interactional nature of energy, with studies either taking energy for granted or viewing energy as a static resource simply 'used' by humans. There is a need, therefore, to recognise energy's role as an interactional participant by investigating how energy operates in everyday human and technology interactions. Understanding how energy is present in everyday practices can give energy a 'voice' and provide new insight into the area of energy-use. As energy-use is embedded in routine practices, an ethnographic approach is considered necessary to explore the interactional role of energy. This study uses ethnographic observation in an office setting to examine routine interactions between humans, technology and energy in a workplace context. Observing these everyday workplace practices reveals four different states energy assumes as operational, idle, reserved or absent. Human interactions with technology can influence the presence of energy, while energy working in a coalition with technology can influence human actions through its presence.

Item Type:Conference Paper
Status:Published
Keywords:energy-use; ethnography; everyday workplace practice; human-technology interactions.
Subjects:370000 Studies in Human Society > 370100 Sociology > 370107 Social Change
ID Code:6073
Deposited By:Willans, Bernadette
Deposited On:07 February 2007
Copyright Owner:Copyright 2006 (The authors)