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Digital Energy Artefacts And Policy Misalignment: Gendered Unintended Consequences In Mongolia’S Clean Energy Transition

デジタルエネルギーアーティファクトと政策のミスアライメント:モンゴルのクリーンエネルギー移行におけるジェンダー化された意図せざる結果 (AI 翻訳)

Mairead O'Connor, Carmen Leong, Jargalan Bat-Orgil

Journal of the Association for Information Systems📚 査読済 / ジャーナル2026-06-14#エネルギー転換Origin: Global
原典: https://aisel.aisnet.org/ecis2026/is_policy/is_policy/7
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🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本論文は、公共部門のクリーンエネルギー介入で使用されるIS成果物(監視システムとプラットフォームベースの通信チャネル)が、どのようにジェンダー化された意図せざる結果を生み出すかを調査する。4つのメカニズムを特定し、そのうち3つでは成果物の設計選択がジェンダー化されたミスアライメントを再生産する。政策設計原則を提案する。

English

This paper investigates how an IS artefact (monitoring system, IoT, and communication platforms) used in a public-sector clean energy intervention generates gendered unintended consequences. It identifies four mechanisms, three of which show how design choices reproduce gendered misalignment. It proposes prescriptive policy design principles for future deployments.

Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.

📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters

日本のGX文脈において

日本のGX政策では、デジタル技術を活用したエネルギー移行が進む中で、社会的影響やジェンダー視点の重要性が増している。本論文の知見は、日本でも同様の介入を計画する際に考慮すべき示唆を提供する。

In the global GX context

While focused on Mongolia, the paper's mechanism analysis and policy design principles are relevant globally for clean energy interventions involving digital components, especially in low-income or rural settings. It adds to the literature on socio-technical transitions and inclusive policy design.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:Provides a framework for analyzing unintended consequences of digital artifacts in energy transitions, with relevance for IS and sustainability research.

🏢実務担当者:Highlights the need to consider user diversity and avoid design assumptions that may reproduce inequalities in clean energy projects.

🏛政策担当者:Offers concrete policy design principles to prevent gendered misalignment in digital energy interventions.

📄 Abstract(原文)

This paper investigates how an IS artefact used in a public-sector clean energy intervention generates gendered unintended consequences that are relevant for IS policy. The IS artefact consists of a monitoring system (i.e., energy application and IoT sensors) and platform-based communication channels (i.e., Facebook group and messenger), embedded within a broader sociotechnical intervention including solar-powered heating systems and community training. Our analysis identifies four mechanisms emerging from the interaction between the IS artefact and household, institutional, and programme structures. In three of four mechanisms, the artefact's design choices actively reproduce gendered misalignment by embedding assumptions about users, communication, and documentation inconsistent with conditions in women-led, low-income households. We develop four prescriptive policy design principles specifying what implementing agencies, technical providers, and regulators should change before the next deployment cycle. The findings illustrate how artefact-centred analysis reveals that digital interventions can actively reproduce the gendered misalignments they are deployed to address.

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