What’s cooking? Unverified assumptions, overlooking of local needs and pro-solution biases in the solar cooking literature

Solar cookers have been tested and studied in various settings, but despite their envisioned benefits – reduction of deforestation, economic benefits, improved health, and empowerment of women – results have been modest at best. This article performs a critical review of the literature on solar cooking (SC), to scrutinise the assumptions and methodological choices that may explain this conundrum. The literature review yielded 32 articles on solar cookers in Sub-Saharan Africa, where most SC projects can be found. Four recurrent types of issues stand out: local needs are often not sufficiently considered, existing cooking and fuelwood practices are seen as obstacles, many articles show a prosolution bias and there is a lack of methodologically sound impact studies. To overcome these issues, practice theory – which analyses the practice of cooking from the logic of the practice, rather than from an external point of view – is proposed to guide and focus future SC projects and studies. Furthermore, ethnographical methods can provide new and grounded evidence and allow for a stronger focus on local needs. These approaches can provide a fruitful evidence base to analyse the role of solar-cooking in achieving sustainable and long-term development benefits in the Global South.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Iessa, L., de Vries, Y.A., Swinkels, C.E., Smits, M., Butijn, C.A.A.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:development, practices, review, solar cooking,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/whats-cooking-unverified-assumptions-overlooking-of-local-needs-a
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5211512024-10-02 Iessa, L. de Vries, Y.A. Swinkels, C.E. Smits, M. Butijn, C.A.A. Article/Letter to editor Energy Research & Social Science 28 (2017) ISSN: 2214-6296 What’s cooking? Unverified assumptions, overlooking of local needs and pro-solution biases in the solar cooking literature 2017 Solar cookers have been tested and studied in various settings, but despite their envisioned benefits – reduction of deforestation, economic benefits, improved health, and empowerment of women – results have been modest at best. This article performs a critical review of the literature on solar cooking (SC), to scrutinise the assumptions and methodological choices that may explain this conundrum. The literature review yielded 32 articles on solar cookers in Sub-Saharan Africa, where most SC projects can be found. Four recurrent types of issues stand out: local needs are often not sufficiently considered, existing cooking and fuelwood practices are seen as obstacles, many articles show a prosolution bias and there is a lack of methodologically sound impact studies. To overcome these issues, practice theory – which analyses the practice of cooking from the logic of the practice, rather than from an external point of view – is proposed to guide and focus future SC projects and studies. Furthermore, ethnographical methods can provide new and grounded evidence and allow for a stronger focus on local needs. These approaches can provide a fruitful evidence base to analyse the role of solar-cooking in achieving sustainable and long-term development benefits in the Global South. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/whats-cooking-unverified-assumptions-overlooking-of-local-needs-a 10.1016/j.erss.2017.04.007 https://edepot.wur.nl/416103 development practices review solar cooking https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
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country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic development
practices
review
solar cooking
development
practices
review
solar cooking
spellingShingle development
practices
review
solar cooking
development
practices
review
solar cooking
Iessa, L.
de Vries, Y.A.
Swinkels, C.E.
Smits, M.
Butijn, C.A.A.
What’s cooking? Unverified assumptions, overlooking of local needs and pro-solution biases in the solar cooking literature
description Solar cookers have been tested and studied in various settings, but despite their envisioned benefits – reduction of deforestation, economic benefits, improved health, and empowerment of women – results have been modest at best. This article performs a critical review of the literature on solar cooking (SC), to scrutinise the assumptions and methodological choices that may explain this conundrum. The literature review yielded 32 articles on solar cookers in Sub-Saharan Africa, where most SC projects can be found. Four recurrent types of issues stand out: local needs are often not sufficiently considered, existing cooking and fuelwood practices are seen as obstacles, many articles show a prosolution bias and there is a lack of methodologically sound impact studies. To overcome these issues, practice theory – which analyses the practice of cooking from the logic of the practice, rather than from an external point of view – is proposed to guide and focus future SC projects and studies. Furthermore, ethnographical methods can provide new and grounded evidence and allow for a stronger focus on local needs. These approaches can provide a fruitful evidence base to analyse the role of solar-cooking in achieving sustainable and long-term development benefits in the Global South.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet development
practices
review
solar cooking
author Iessa, L.
de Vries, Y.A.
Swinkels, C.E.
Smits, M.
Butijn, C.A.A.
author_facet Iessa, L.
de Vries, Y.A.
Swinkels, C.E.
Smits, M.
Butijn, C.A.A.
author_sort Iessa, L.
title What’s cooking? Unverified assumptions, overlooking of local needs and pro-solution biases in the solar cooking literature
title_short What’s cooking? Unverified assumptions, overlooking of local needs and pro-solution biases in the solar cooking literature
title_full What’s cooking? Unverified assumptions, overlooking of local needs and pro-solution biases in the solar cooking literature
title_fullStr What’s cooking? Unverified assumptions, overlooking of local needs and pro-solution biases in the solar cooking literature
title_full_unstemmed What’s cooking? Unverified assumptions, overlooking of local needs and pro-solution biases in the solar cooking literature
title_sort what’s cooking? unverified assumptions, overlooking of local needs and pro-solution biases in the solar cooking literature
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/whats-cooking-unverified-assumptions-overlooking-of-local-needs-a
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