“…Young people's fluid lifestyles and specific end-use energy demand patterns mean that fuel poverty metaphorically and physically overflows the limits of home, creating multiple performativities of precarity in spaces (such as libraries, caf es, university buildings, work offices) that have received very little attention to date. The interactions between housing and energy injustices in driving young people's precarisation point to the need for a spatially integrated understanding of the manner in which fuel poverty reflects manifold vulnerabilities beyond energy, including the precarity of housing, food and labour (Lewis et al, 2014). This also calls for further explorations of processes of socio-technical subject-formation (Walker, Cass, Burningham, & Barnett, 2010) to understand how domestic energy deprivation is conditioned, institutionalised and reproduced via a set of material and institutional normativities (Rudge, 2012).…”