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The Jevons paradox unravelled: A multi-level typology of rebound effects and mechanisms

Steffen Lange, Florian Kern, Jan Peuckert, Tilman Santarius

2021Energy Research & Social Science98 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Literature on the rebound phenomenon has grown significantly over the last decade. However, the field is characterized by diverse and ambiguous definitions and by substantial discrepancies in empirical estimates and policy proposals. As a result, cumulative knowledge production is difficult. To address these issues, this article develops a novel typology. Based on a critical review of existing classifications, the typology introduces an important differentiation between the rebound mechanisms, which generate changes in energy consumption, and the rebound effects, which describe the size of such changes. Both rebound mechanisms and rebound effects can be analytically related to four economic levels – micro, meso, macro and global – and two time frames – short run and long run. The typology is populated with eighteen rebound mechanisms from the literature. This contribution is the first that transparently describes its criteria and methodology for developing a rebound typology and that gives clear definitions of all terms involved. The resulting rebound typology aims to establish common conceptual ground for future research on the rebound phenomenon and for developing rebound mitigation policies.

Topics & Concepts

TypologyRebound effect (conservation)PhenomenonConsumption (sociology)EconomicsProduction (economics)Positive economicsEnergy consumptionMicroeconomicsSociologyEngineeringEpistemologySocial sciencePhilosophyElectrical engineeringAnthropologyEnergy, Environment, and Transportation PoliciesEnvironmental Impact and SustainabilityVehicle emissions and performance
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