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[{"model": "core.projectfund", "pk": 22832, "fields": {"project": 13, "organisation": 8, "amount": 0, "start_date": "2017-09-30", "end_date": "2024-04-26", "raw_data": 38103}}]
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[{"model": "core.projectfund", "pk": 14929, "fields": {"project": 13, "organisation": 8, "amount": 0, "start_date": "2017-09-30", "end_date": "2024-04-26", "raw_data": 30}}]
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[{"model": "core.projectorganisation", "pk": 56751, "fields": {"project": 13, "organisation": 1714, "role": "LEAD_ORG"}}]
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[{"model": "core.projectperson", "pk": 34957, "fields": {"project": 13, "person": 1998, "role": "STUDENT_PER"}}]
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[{"model": "core.projectperson", "pk": 34956, "fields": {"project": 13, "person": 2007, "role": "SUPER_PER"}}]
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{"title": ["", "The role of place attachment in community renewable energy: an interdisciplinary study"], "description": ["", "\nThis proposal is for a collaborative interdisciplinary study drawing from human geography and\nplanning policy. It addresses a two-fold gap in knowledge; little is known about how place\nattachment informs responses to community energy projects and no published studies to\ndate have asked how a better understanding of this might inform planning policy and\npractice.\nRenewable energy has widespread support (ComRes, 2016), but there is often strong\nopposition to specific proposals, which can lead to schemes being delayed or rejected (Jones\nand Eiser, 2010). Place attachment, a concept used in human geography and environmental\npsychology to study the emotional bonds between people and places, has been shown to\ninfluence how people respond to large-scale renewable energy developments such as wind\nfarms (Devine-Wright, 2011a), other large-scale energy infrastructure such as high voltage\npower lines (Devine-Wright, 2013; Bailey et al, 2016), and smaller scale community energy\nprojects (van Veelen and Haggett, 2016). It has also been suggested that place attachment\nmight be applied in planning policy to inform community engagement and help manage\nconflicts (Devine-Wright 2009).\nIt is sometimes assumed that community ownership reduces opposition to renewable energy\nprojects (Bell et al, 2005), but van Veelen & Haggett (op. cit.) warn against this presumption.\nTheir analysis of two schemes in the Highlands of Scotland is the only published study to date\nlooking specifically at place attachment in community energy; place attachment was found to\ninfluence widely varying responses. My proposal is novel in extending the evidence base to\nEngland and including an analysis of potential policy application.\nMy study will be based on case studies in Cornwall, where plentiful renewable resources are\ncentral to policy for their contribution to the economy (Cornwall Council, 2013). Cornwall\nCouncil seeks greater community ownership of generating capacity and has innovated in\nincluding this in supplementary planning guidance (Cornwall Council, 2016). Delivery has been\nslow however, due in part to local opposition (Simpson, 2017, Niven, 2014); my study\naddresses this by developing understanding of the reasons for opposition and looking for\nways to address it through the development process.\n\n"], "extra_text": ["", "\n\n\n\n"], "status": ["", "Active"]}
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{"external_links": [13]}
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[{"model": "core.project", "pk": 13, "fields": {"owner": null, "is_locked": false, "coped_id": "8e7a857d-8bef-4e6d-be65-f3942391d1e1", "title": "", "description": "", "extra_text": "", "status": "", "start": null, "end": null, "raw_data": 18, "created": "2022-04-11T01:28:44.827Z", "modified": "2022-04-11T01:28:44.827Z", "external_links": []}}]
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