Paper Number

ECIS2025-1977

Paper Type

SP

Abstract

To support Mongolian women transitioning to clean energy, digital interventions such as an energy monitoring mobile application, a Facebook group, and capacity-building programs can be used to promote awareness, track savings, and facilitate behavioral change. This study examines the unintended consequences of environmental, individual influences, and individual identity that women experience when transitioning to renewable energy (RE) in Mongolia. Based on the initial phase of an Action Design Research study, we identified the unintended consequences that impact their social roles, economic stability, and access to resources. Specifically, our findings show that the RE transition creates tensions in gender roles and community expectations, imposes economic strain due to high costs and limited subsidies, and exposes gaps in access to digital tools, formal support, and governance resources. The study extends our understanding of the intersecting social, cultural, and personal factors that influence women’s engagement with sustainable energy solutions.

Author Connect URL

https://authorconnect.aisnet.org/conferences/ECIS2025/papers/ECIS2025-1977

Author Connect Link

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Jun 18th, 12:00 AM

Supporting Women in Mongolia's Clean Energy Transition: An Action Design for Information Systems Interventions

To support Mongolian women transitioning to clean energy, digital interventions such as an energy monitoring mobile application, a Facebook group, and capacity-building programs can be used to promote awareness, track savings, and facilitate behavioral change. This study examines the unintended consequences of environmental, individual influences, and individual identity that women experience when transitioning to renewable energy (RE) in Mongolia. Based on the initial phase of an Action Design Research study, we identified the unintended consequences that impact their social roles, economic stability, and access to resources. Specifically, our findings show that the RE transition creates tensions in gender roles and community expectations, imposes economic strain due to high costs and limited subsidies, and exposes gaps in access to digital tools, formal support, and governance resources. The study extends our understanding of the intersecting social, cultural, and personal factors that influence women’s engagement with sustainable energy solutions.

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