Research
I investigate the factors that hinder and facilitate political support for renewable energy, aiming to improve its political viability while also taking different social contexts into account. Currently, the work is centred on attitudes towards offshore wind energy compared to perceptions of other renewable energy sources, and to what extent framing can affect these preferences. I am also interested in substantive political representation in relation to climate and morality policies. A list of my working papers is available here.
In my work, I mostly pursue quantitative approaches, utilizing both experimental and observational data.
Teaching
Lecturer in statistics and quantitative methods.
Spring 2025: Lecturer in MET104 Quantitative Methods in Social Sciences
Spring 2025: Lecturer in SAMPOL611 Societal security and crisis management
Fall 2024: Lecturer in MET102 Methods in Social Sciences
Fall 2024: Lecturer in SAMPOL260 Bachelor thesis in comparative politics
Spring 2024: Lecturer in MET102 Methods in Social Sciences
Spring 2024: Lecturer in SAMPOL260 Bachelor thesis in comparative politics
Fall 2023: Seminar leader in MET102 Methods in Social Sciences
Fall 2021: Seminar leader in MET102 Methods in Social Sciences
Publications
Academic lecture
- Skogen, Marte Samuelsen (2024). Don’t say it’s about the climate! How climate framing can depress support for renewable energy. (external link)
- Skogen, Marte Samuelsen (2024). Don’t say it’s about the climate! How framing can shape support for renewable energy (or not). (external link)
- Skogen, Marte Samuelsen (2024). Offshore Wind Attitudes in Norway: Spillovers, Backyards and Political Trust. (external link)
- Skogen, Marte Samuelsen (2024). Unequal Representation and Morality Policy: The Effect of Education on Opinion-Policy Congruence. (external link)