Living Off-Grid in Wales addresses broad debates about the possibility of planning for a sustainable future, by an examination of rural development off the grid. Contrasting Wales's policy on One Planet Development - a planning policy that encourages living off-grid - with a more DIY approach to living off-grid, the book presents case studies from eco-villages that imagine off-grid very differently. The text pivots on the problematic question that if planning is about the spatial reproduction of society, then why should it encourage autonomy from societal systems. The ethnographic case studies in the book comprise an ethnography of rural Wales, and the focus on eco-villages brings a fresh perspective to the anthropological literature on community by considering off-grid as a radical form of social assemblage.
Autorentext
This study will be of interest to undergrad and postgraduate students, professionals (planner, policy), and researchers.
Inhalt
List of Illustrations ForewordPreface Acknowledgements 0 Introduction 1 Wales 2 Y Mynydd: A Village off the Grid 3 Tir y Gafel: A Model Village 4 More Problems with Community 5 Living Off-grid: Towards a Material Culture6 OPD: Policy in Practice 7 Concluding Remarks References Index