- 2023. Ryan Thomas Trahan and Brad Jantz. What is ESG? Rethinking the "E" Pillar. Business Strategy and the Environment
Available open access [link]
- 2022. Ryan Thomas Trahan and David J. Hess. Will power be local? The role of local power organizations in energy transition acceleration, 183 Technological Forecasting and Social Change 121884.
Available open access [link]
- 2021. Ryan Thomas Trahan and David J. Hess. Who Controls Electricity Transitions? Digitization, Decarbonization, and Local Power Organizations, 80 Energy Research & Social Science 102219.
Available open access [link]
- 2021. Ryan Thomas Trahan, Counting Carbon: Forward-Looking Analysis Of Decarbonization, 27 Hastings Environmental Law Journal 110.
Available open access [link]
- * 2020. Dasom Lee, David J. Hess, and Himanshu Neema. The Challenges of Implementing Transactive Energy: A Comparative Analysis of Experimental Projects. The Electricity Journal.
Available open access [link]
* denotes partial support by the U.S. National Science Foundation, OISE-1743772, Partnerships for International Science and Engineering (PIRE) Program: “Science of Design for Societal-Scale Cyber-Physical Systems.” Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed here do not necessarily reflect the views of the funder.
- 2020. David J. Hess and Dasom Lee. “Energy Decentralization in California and New York: Value Conflicts in the Politics of Shared Solar and Community Choice.” Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews
Available open access [link]
- 2019. Ryan Thomas Trahan, A Minimal Problem of Marginal Emissions, 49 Environmental Law Reporter 10786
Available [link]
- 2019. David J. Hess, Coalitions, Framing, and the Politics of Energy Transitions: Local Democracy and Community Choice in California. Energy Research and Social Science.
Available open access [link]
- 2017. Ryan Thomas Trahan, Regulating Toward (In)Security in the U.S. Electricity System, 12 Texas Journal of Oil, Gas, and Energy Law 1.
Available open access [link]
- 2016. David J. Hess, The Politics of Niche-Regime Conflicts: Distributed Solar Energy in the United States. Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions 19: 42-45.
Available open access [link]