Lexington Books
Pages: 154
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-1-7936-4447-3 • Hardback • May 2021 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-1-7936-4448-0 • eBook • May 2021 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Ayşe Sevencan is assistant professor of economics at Yeditepe University.
Natalya Ketenci is professor of economics at Yeditepe University.
| Introduction | |
1 | Energy Map of Eastern Europe and Middle East. Alper Altınanahtar | |
2 | Energy Resources of the Eastern Mediterranean: The EastMed project. Natalya Ketenci | |
3 | Energy Efficiency and Human Development in Eastern Europe’s leading Energy supplier countries. Ayşe Sevencan | |
4 | Resourceless power: Gaining Economic and Political Power without any Resources. Çağrı Levent Uslu | |
5 | Energy as a Complicating Factor: Conflict in the Eastern Mediterranean and the New Challenges in Cyprus Question. Gizem Alioğlu Çakmak, Melih Güner | |
6 | Friends or Foes? Climate and Energy Policies in Turkey Barış Gencer Baykan | |
7 | Renewable Energy, Electricity Production and Economic Growth in Middle East Gülfer Vural | |
8 | The Economics of Renewable Energy: The Cross-Country Analysis Hatice Kerra Geldi | |
9 | From Past to Future: The Entrepreneurial Ecosystem for Energy Start-ups in Turkey. Özlem Kunday | |
10 | An Overview to Sustainable Energy Supply Chain Management Özlem Şenvar | |
| Conclusion | |
This book brings together ten original studies on economics and politics of energy in the Middle East and Eastern Europe. The country specific analyses, embedded in rich description of resource, economic and political environments aiming for sustainable development. The contributions to the book are a combination on in-country researchers with in-depth local knowledge to access to data and scholars with technical expertise and experience. This approach ensures the book’s appeal to academics and researchers in energy studies. The readers will find the analysis invaluable.
— Yelena Kalyuzhnova, Henley Business School, UK
Growing concerns over environmental degradation due to fossil energy consumption in the last three decades have led to academic researchers providing insightful explanations and plausible solutions. This edited book extends and contributes to the existing literature with further fruitful discussions and suggestions with an interdisciplinary approach. I believe that both scholars and policymakers in the fields of energy and environmental economics would equally benefit from the content of this valuable research.
— Ferda Halicioglu, University of Lincoln, UK