Ingenjörerna: by Gunnar Wetterberg, Albert Bonniers förlag, 2020, 366 pp., SEK 222, Stockholm, ISBN 978-91-0018074-4
In: Scandinavian economic history review, Band 70, Heft 3, S. 321-322
ISSN: 1750-2837
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In: Scandinavian economic history review, Band 70, Heft 3, S. 321-322
ISSN: 1750-2837
In: Journal for the history of environment and society, Band 3, S. 71-105
ISSN: 2506-6749
In: Journal for the history of environment and society, Band 3, S. 1-32
ISSN: 2506-6749
Geopolitics and identities in the age of rails and telegraphs -- Electricity and competing visions of a united Europe -- Europe connected, disconnected, and reconnected -- Reflections on Europe and infrastructures
In: van der Vleuten , E B A & Kaijser , A 2005 , ' Networking Europe ' , History and Technology , vol. 21 , no. 1 , pp. 21-48 . https://doi.org/10.1080/07341510500037495
The paper explores processes of transnational network building in Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries. The first section reviews several relevant literatures. It concludes that historiographies of Europe often recognize the pivotal importance of transnational network building, but fail to analyse network developments as well as their entanglement with wider historical processes. Specialized infrastructure studies exist in economic and technological history, but have a distinct (sub)national focus. The networking of Europe has not been investigated. The second section presents a preliminary narrative of transnational network building in the 19th and 20th century. It highlights the relationship between network building and political events in different eras, as well as different types of ambiguities or tensions. The conclusion suggests a number of topics for further research.
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In: Making Europe: Technology and Transformations, 1850-2000
Europe's Infrastructure Transition captures the conflicted story of European integration. We learn of the priorities set, the choices made in constructing infrastructure connections within and beyond the continent. And we see how Europe's infrastructure both united and divided people and places via economic systems, crises, and wars
In: Energy and society
With the aim of overcoming the disciplinary and national fragmentation that characterizes much research on nuclear energy, Engaging the Atom brings together specialists from a variety of fields to analyze comparative case studies across Europe and the United States. It explores evolving relationships between society and the nuclear sector from the origins of civilian nuclear power until the present, asking why nuclear energy has been more contentious in some countries than in others and why some countries have never gone nuclear, or have decided to phase out nuclear, while their neighbors have committed to the so-called nuclear renaissance. Contributors examine the challenges facing the nuclear sector in the context of aging reactor fleets, pressing climate urgency, and increasing competition from renewable energy sources. Written by leading academics in their respective disciplines, the nine chapters of Engaging the Atom place the evolution of nuclear energy within a broader set of national and international configurations, including its role within policies and markets.