id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-287248-otbiiybs Lacey-Barnacle, Max Proximities of energy justice: contesting community energy and austerity in England 2020-08-21 .txt text/plain 10795 385 40 Shifting relationships between local energy actors and Lawrence Weston highlight opportunities for the remediation of past claims of injustice, facilitating processes of restorative justice, whilst local energy schemes that seek to advance greater 'active participant' (skills training & employment) opportunities for deprived communities in which they, or their projects, are embedded, may be underpinned by recognition justice concerns. While these residents of Lawrence Weston / members of ALW felt that local low-carbon energy transitions were failing to recognise a community within close proximity to new infrastructures, alongside seeing the potential benefit for greater involvement in transitions, a director of LCG felt that ALW's claims of injustice were unjustified: In addition to this, BEC wanted to encourage ALW to use their contributions to fund training activities within the local community, as noted by a member of BEN when discussing the passive recipient approach to local community engagement and support: Furthering the creation of new economic opportunities in a time of austerity, this aspect of restorative justice connects powerfully to distributional justice and a focused, targeted approach to delivering the benefits of the low-carbon economy to deprived areas. ./cache/cord-287248-otbiiybs.txt ./txt/cord-287248-otbiiybs.txt