4.3 Article

Assemblage-democracy: Reconceptualising democracy through material resource governance

Journal

POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
Volume 88, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.polgeo.2021.102403

Keywords

Democracy; Democratic theory; Material participation; Energy governance; Energy democracy; Low carbon transitions

Funding

  1. FORMAS - the Swedish Research Council for Sustainable Development [2019-01627]
  2. Sheffield Hallam University
  3. UK Economic AMP
  4. Social Research Council (ESRC)
  5. Formas [2019-01627] Funding Source: Formas
  6. Swedish Research Council [2019-01627] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council
  7. Vinnova [2019-01627] Funding Source: Vinnova

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This article introduces the concept of "assemblage-democracy," emphasizing the key dimensions of materiality, publics, and scale in democratic thinking. It argues that democracy is emergent, precarious, and plural. Through empirical analysis of democratic energy experiments, it reveals the fragile, contingent, and contested nature of democratic practices in energy infrastructures.
This article furthers political geographic thinking on democracy by generating and employing a conceptualisation of 'assemblage-democracy'. Bringing an assemblage perspective to democratic thinking brings to the fore three key dimensions: the co-constitution of material and non-material connections; connectivity and associations, in particular engagement with multiple heterogeneous 'minoritarian' publics; and the (re)construction of spatial configurations such as scale. We employ these three dimensions of materiality, publics, and scale, in combination with the concept of (de)territorialisation to produce a geographic conceptualisation of democracy as emergent, precarious, and plural. We operationalise and refine the concept of assemblage-democracy through an empirical analysis of democratic experiments with energy resources. Specifically, we analyse negotiations involved in emergent democratic energy experiments through in-depth qualitative empirical study of community-owned energy projects in the UK, asking what kind of democracy emerges with new technologies and how? In answering this question, we demonstrate the fragile, contingent, and contested nature of democratic practices and connections produced in the (re)enactment of energy infrastructures. In doing so, this article also shows how an assemblage lens can offer a renewed understanding of how democratic politics is configured through material resource governance.

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