Dr Margot Verdier

Independent Scholar Fellow 2024-25

The Emerging Politics of Energy Workers. A Study of Forms of Work and Political Agency in the Green Transition

In recent years, the energy transition has become a focal point of social controversies and struggles. Indeed, means developed to reach a carbon-neutral society often conflict with issues of class and territorial inequalities. In Europe, a particular subject of attention is the conversion of highly fossil fuel dependent regions which often appear to be the poorest of the continent. Scholars discuss constraints faced by citizens to participate in decision-making and the conditions for the ecological transition to strengthen democracy. However, political issues raised by the changing process of production itself remain undocumented. My research will overcome this blind-spot through a case-study. The region of Western Macedonia produces 40 % of the lignite-fired electricity of Greece, the 2nd producer of the EU (4th worldwide). The coal phase-out launched in 2019 affects (directly or indirectly) 10 % of the active population which already reaches the highest rate of unemployment in the EU (27%, World Bank, 2020). This ISRF Fellowship will allow a fieldwork of 8 months based on semi-structured interviews, observations and discourse analysis.

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Biography

Margot Verdier is a fieldwork sociologist. Her work focuses on the energy transition, the theory and organisational practices of anti-authoritarian social struggles, and the ethics of scientific research. She has taught for 5 years in French universities and she is now an independent researcher based in Greece. Her first book Le commun de l’autonomie (“Autonomy as a common”) examines the possibility of an 'anti-authoritarian' form of collective life where equality and individual freedom are placed on an equal footing. She has also published articles about the ethics of fieldwork research focusing on participants’ identity and data protection. Her current work explores the evolution of the energy production system and its impact on energy workers and broader socio-political relationships.

Biographical details correct as of 14.01.25

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