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Dive into the research topics where Sylvia Breukers is active.

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Featured researches published by Sylvia Breukers.


Journal of Environmental Planning and Management | 2010

Contrasting the core beliefs regarding the effective implementation of wind power. An international study of stakeholder perspectives

Maarten Wolsink; Sylvia Breukers

This paper analyses patterns in beliefs about the implementation of wind power as part of a geographical comparison of onshore wind power developments in the Netherlands, North-Rhine Westphalia and England. Q methodology is applied, in order to systematically compare the patterns in stakeholder views on the institutional conditions and changes in the domains of energy policy, spatial planning and environmental policy. Three factors represent support for wind power implementation from fundamentally different perspectives. The fourth perspective is critical opposed to wind power developments as well as critical to the manner in which wind projects are proposed, planned and implemented. These four perspectives exist across the geographical cases; however, some perspectives are prominent in one case and marginal in another. This relates to different legacies and varying implementation achievements in the three cases. The analysis shows that an approach that focuses on implementing as much wind power as possible, relying on technocratic reasoning and hierarchical policies is in practice the least successful, whereas collaborative perspectives with more emphasis on local issues and less on the interests of the conventional energy sector were particularly dominant in the most successful case, North-Rhine Westphalia.


Environmental Politics | 2007

Wind energy policies in the Netherlands: Institutional capacity-building for ecological modernisation

Sylvia Breukers; Maarten Wolsink

Abstract The research question of this paper is how institutional conditions affected policy and planning processes for wind energy implementation. This is studied from the perspective of building institutional capacity in order to start policy learning. Implementation in the Netherlands has been ponderous, due to an emphasis on centralised policy-making, and an underestimation of issues of spatial and environmental planning and problems of local acceptance. Over time, little support has been mobilised for wind power developments, and resistance has increased. Nevertheless, as an unintended consequence of liberalisation, locally owned wind projects have accelerated implementation achievements in recent years.


Journal of Environmental Planning and Management | 2015

Organisational aspects of public engagement in European energy infrastructure planning: the case of early-stage CCS projects

Sylvia Breukers; Paul Upham

Recent years have witnessed a proliferation of studies on public perceptions of carbon capture and storage (CCS), accompanied by efforts to translate such knowledge into toolkits for public engagement and communication. At the same time, both literature and toolkits have paid little attention to the organisational dynamics and views of project implementers with regard to public engagement. Here we investigate the views of project development consortia employees in five European CCS projects, focusing on their experience of organisational norms and structures relating to engagement. Finding that planning for this engagement has, in several cases, been hampered by a lack of shared internal vision on engagement and communication within the project consortia, at least initially, we draw upon the socio-technical approach to technology embedment and new institutional theory, to observe that internal organisational alignment is crucial in multi-organisational projects when seeking effective public engagement and communication. We observe that this aspect of internal organisation is not yet reflected in the toolkits and guidelines designed to aid engagement in CCS projects. Engagement guides need to direct the attention of project implementers not only in specific outward directions, but also towards reflexively considering their own internal structures, perspectives, motivations, expectations and aims in relation to engagement and communication practice.


Renewable & Sustainable Energy Reviews | 2008

Wind power deployment outcomes: How can we account for the differences?

David Toke; Sylvia Breukers; Maarten Wolsink


Energy Policy | 2007

Wind power implementation in changing institutional landscapes: An international comparison.

Sylvia Breukers; Maarten Wolsink


Ecological Economics | 2010

Q methodology to select participants for a stakeholder dialogue on energy options from biomass in the Netherlands

Eefje Cuppen; Sylvia Breukers; M. Hisschemoller; Emmy Bergsma


Technological Forecasting and Social Change | 2014

Analysing the past and exploring the future of sustainable biomass. Participatory stakeholder dialogue and technological innovation systems research

Sylvia Breukers; M. Hisschemoller; Eefje Cuppen; Roald A.A. Suurs


Handbook of Sustainable Engineering.; pp 773-792 (2013) | 2013

Changing energy demand behavior: potential of demand-side management

Sylvia Breukers; Rm Ruth Mourik; Eva Heiskanen


Energy research and social science | 2017

Institutional ‘lock-out’ towards local self-governance? Environmental justice and sustainable transformations in Dutch social housing neighbourhoods

Sylvia Breukers; Rm Ruth Mourik; van Lfm Luc Summeren; Gpj Geert Verbong


Archive | 2014

Young people, ICT and energy - status and trends in young people's use and understanding of ICT and energy consumption: D2.1 Technical Report on the Organisation and Outcomes of Focus Groups and the Mapping Exercise

Toke Haunstrup Christensen; Rm Ruth Mourik; Sylvia Breukers; Tomas Mathijsen; Herjan van den Heuve

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Rm Ruth Mourik

Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands

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Eefje Cuppen

Delft University of Technology

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Gpj Geert Verbong

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Cfj Feenstra

Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands

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Emmy Bergsma

VU University Amsterdam

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van Lfm Luc Summeren

Eindhoven University of Technology

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David Toke

University of Aberdeen

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