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CenSES annual report 2014

38

2014 dissertation: Sara Heidenreich, NTNU

Sara Heidenreich defended her PhD thesis in October 2014

at the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture.

Her thesis “Blowing in the wind: The socialization of

o shore wind technology” deals with the socialization of

the emerging o shore wind technology in Norway.

In particular, it focuses on two potential agents of

socialization, news media and scientists.

The development of renewable energy technologies is a

widely acknowledged strategy to address climate change.

However, for a successful implementation of technology,

socialization, i.e. embedding the technology into society, is

crucial.

The rst paper, Dingpolitik at Sea: O shore wind energy

in the news media discourse, focuses on news media as

socialization agents. Siting renewable energy o shore is

often considered a solution to implementation problems

onshore, as it is “out of sight, out of mind”. By analyzing the

Norwegian news media discourse on o shore wind energy,

this paper investigates whether moving wind turbines at

sea really prevents controversy. It nds that although media

coverage is largely positive, still, o shore wind energy is

contested mainly within economic, environmental and

moral frameworks. Further, values and concerns rather than

facts are contested in the media debate, while the

technology, in its physical form, is blackboxed.

The second paper, Sublime technology and object of fear:

O shore wind scientists assessing publics, and the third

paper, Outreaching, outsourcing, and disembedding: How

o shore wind scientists consider their engagement with

the public, address o shore wind scientists as socialization

agents. They study the scientists’ imaginings of the public(s)

and their socialization strategies.

The ndings indicate that the scientists construct

ambivalent narratives about the public(s). The continued

presence of narratives of a negative public in the context

of a technology that is supposed to be “out of sight, out of

mind,” could be understood as an act of othering the public.

Moreover, most scientists did not embrace their role as

agents of socialization. Rather, the strategies of outsourcing

the socialization to other actors and of disembedded

technology development, i.e. declaring socialization

unnecessary, are common.

The thesis highlights the important role of the media

both as agent of and arena for socialization. Furthermore,

considering the hesitance among scientists to act as agents

of socialization, it suggests that other actors may be more

suitable agents of socialization. It also points to the

signi cance of the “out of sight, out of mind”motive which

is used to construct socialization as irrelevant and disembed

technology development. Hence, the new trend to produce

renewable energy at sea may present new challenges for its

socialization.