Electric Life

Utility Regulation and the Fight for Energy Democracy

Author Nikki Luke
How workers and customers engage utility regulation to act on climate change, energy affordability, and environmental, racial, and economic injustice.

Electric Life traces the intertwined history of Atlanta’s racialized uneven development and growing electricity use to show how electricity infrastructure shapes everyday life. Nikki Luke looks at how quotidian relationships with the electric utility catalyze intersectional organizing for energy democracy. She also investigates the legal and material construction of the investor-owned utility as a regulated monopoly and the state public service commission that regulates it.

Contemporary organizing for energy democracy questions how the utility and the systems that govern it need to change to ensure energy affordability, provide remedy and reparation for enduring environmental and energy injustice, and build a just and equitable energy transition from fossil fuels. Bridging urban, environmental, and labor studies, the author demonstrates how these demands to change the utility emerge from the tradition of civil rights, labor, and environmental organizing for fair treatment from the utility, affordable energy, protection from pollution, and good jobs.
Introduction: The Value of Electric Life
Chapter 1: Lighting the Atlanta Way
Chapter 2: Paying for Electric Life
Chapter 3: The Slow-Violence of Fossil-Fueled Progress
Chapter 4: Organizing Electricity On and Off the Job
Chapter 5: The Work of Finding Work
Conclusion: Stealing Back Time
Endnotes
Nikki Luke is Assistant Professor of Geography at the University of Tennessee.

About

How workers and customers engage utility regulation to act on climate change, energy affordability, and environmental, racial, and economic injustice.

Electric Life traces the intertwined history of Atlanta’s racialized uneven development and growing electricity use to show how electricity infrastructure shapes everyday life. Nikki Luke looks at how quotidian relationships with the electric utility catalyze intersectional organizing for energy democracy. She also investigates the legal and material construction of the investor-owned utility as a regulated monopoly and the state public service commission that regulates it.

Contemporary organizing for energy democracy questions how the utility and the systems that govern it need to change to ensure energy affordability, provide remedy and reparation for enduring environmental and energy injustice, and build a just and equitable energy transition from fossil fuels. Bridging urban, environmental, and labor studies, the author demonstrates how these demands to change the utility emerge from the tradition of civil rights, labor, and environmental organizing for fair treatment from the utility, affordable energy, protection from pollution, and good jobs.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Value of Electric Life
Chapter 1: Lighting the Atlanta Way
Chapter 2: Paying for Electric Life
Chapter 3: The Slow-Violence of Fossil-Fueled Progress
Chapter 4: Organizing Electricity On and Off the Job
Chapter 5: The Work of Finding Work
Conclusion: Stealing Back Time
Endnotes

Author

Nikki Luke is Assistant Professor of Geography at the University of Tennessee.

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