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Why women are at war with Chevron: Nigerian subsistence struggles against the international oil industry

Dates

Year
2004

Citation

Turner, T.E., 2004, Why women are at war with Chevron: Nigerian subsistence struggles against the international oil industry: Journal of Asian and African Studies, v. 39, iss. 1-2, p. 63-93.

Summary

The present paper aims to identify and describe different types of energy consumers in a more comprehensive way than previous segmentation studies using cluster analysis. Energy consumers were segmented based on their energy-related behavioral characteristics. In addition to purchase- and curtailment-related energy-saving behavior, consumer classification was also based on acceptance of policy measures and energy-related psychosocial factors, so the used behavioral segmentation base was more comprehensive compared to other studies. Furthermore, differentiation between the energy-saving purchase of daily products, such as food, and of energy efficient appliances allowed a more differentiated characterization of the energy consumer segments. [...]

Contacts

Author :
Turner, T.E.

Attached Files

Communities

  • Western Energy Citation Clearinghouse

Tags

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI WECC []
ISSN WECC 0021-9096

Citation Extension

citationTypeJournal Article
journalJournal of Asian and African Studies
parts
typePages
value63-93
typeVolume
value39
typeIssue
value1-2

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