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Article

Beyond the resource curse and pipeline conspiracies: Energy as a social relation in the Middle East

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Citation

Hoffmann C (2018) Beyond the resource curse and pipeline conspiracies: Energy as a social relation in the Middle East. Energy Research and Social Science, 41, pp. 39-47. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2018.04.025

Abstract
This article identifies problematic tendencies in current analyses of the Middle East’s energy relations. All social relations are frequently seen as determined by resource extraction, use and transfer, contributing to the uniquely instable social relations of the Middle East. Social structures despite being energy rich, are seen as incapable to react to old and new geopolitical crises and the effects of global climate change, adding to a picture of chronic underdevelopment and conflict. This article offers an alternative, more optimistic perspective on the Middle East’s energy relations. Privileging the social over the material, calorific, geological or topographic dimensions of energy relations, it argues that social life developed in relation to its natural resources, matter and energy, but is not singularly determined by it. It proposes to historicise and re-politicise the Middle East’s social energy relations, including its nutritional and geopolitical dimensions. Emphasising their dynamic character, energy and its associated infrastructures are subsequently re-defined into political categories, a field of social contestation and change, rather than a limiting biophysical structure. The concept of Social Energy, thus, transforms nature from a constraining externality into an integral part of social analysis and transformation in the Middle East.

Keywords
Middle East; Energy geopolitics; Social relations; Capitalism

Journal
Energy Research and Social Science: Volume 41

StatusPublished
Publication date31/07/2018
Publication date online01/05/2018
Date accepted by journal12/04/2018
URL
PublisherElsevier
eISSN2214-6296

People (1)

Dr Clemens Hoffmann

Dr Clemens Hoffmann

Senior Lecturer, Politics

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