Proud to be a peer-reviewed, co-author today!

Proud to be a peer-reviewed, co-author today!

"The Persistence of High Energy Burdens: A Bibliometric Analysis of Vulnerability, Poverty, and Exclusion in the United States,” Energy Research and Social Science, Vol. 70, September. Brown, Marilyn A., Anmol Soni, Ameet D. Doshi, and Charlotte King. (2020) 
Sonja Ebron

CEO at Courtroom5 ? ABA Legal Rebel ? ABA Women of Legal Tech Honoree ? Fastcase 50 ? Techstars ? Duke Law Tech Lab ? LexisNexis Legal Tech Accelerator

4 年

Congrats! Well done, Charlotte.?

Very timely! Can't wait to read this, Charlotte! Congratulations!

Tim Echols

Commissioner, Georgia Public Service Commission

4 年

This conclusion (end of the paper, of course) "This understudied group of stakeholders includes building owners and landlords, property and building managers, financial institutions, realtors, manufacturers, and contractors," suggests that further study is needed about the entities that "own" the housing stock delivering the high energy burden. Motivating landlords through financial incentives to improve the insulation, HVAC efficiency and "tightness" of the home might be a more prudent use of money and better long-term solution than direct aid to help these "renters" pay high power bills.

Portia Johnson, Ph.D., MBA

Housing Researcher & Community Builder I Passion for People + Housing I Advocates Accessibility + Sustainability I PhD & MBA I @WPCareySchool I @UGA Double dawg I Travel & Thrifting junkie I

4 年

Congratulations on your publication! Very timely and intriguing results as it relates to the impact of Covid on low-income housing consumers. Thanks for sharing!

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