Energy Justice examines who truly benefits from modern power systems-and who quietly pays the highest price.
Written by practising electrical engineers, this book explores how energy infrastructure reflects long-standing social inequities, environmental racism, and economic exclusion. Blending technical insight, global case studies, and real community voices, it reveals how access, affordability, and environmental impact are deeply tied to equity and inclusion.
More than a call for clean energy, Energy Justice is a call for intentional design-because a sustainable grid is not enough. It must also be a just one.
Related Subjects
Political Science Politics & Social Sciences Psychology Social Science Social Sciences