
Irmgard Schultz is one of the co-founders of ISOE and was member of the executive board until March 2014. Until she left ISOE at the end of 2014 she was part of the research unit Energy and Climate Protection in Everyday Life. Irmgard Schultz studied Political Science, Philosophy and Literary Criticism at Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main and received her doctorate there in 1992 with a thesis on “The Thrilling Myth of Money: Money and Gender as a Topic in the Age of Ecology.”
Focus of research
- Consumption research
- Gender and environment
Projects
- No active projects found
- Bio+pro – Target Groups in the Market of Organic Foods
- CITY:mobil – Viable Ways of Urban Mobility
- Consumption Styles - Sustainable Consumer Behaviour
- EUPOPP - Political Strategies and Tools to Promote Sustainable Consumption
- Gender and Environmental Awareness
- Gender Impact Assessement for the BMU
- Gender Impact Assessment for the City of Bremen
- Gender Impact Assessment in Radiation Protection and Environment
- Gender Impact Assessment of the EU-Programme "Enviroment and Sustainable Development"
- Gender Mainstreaming in the National Park Eifel
- Gender Mainstreaming in two Saxon Hospitals
- Gender, Sustainable Consumption and Environmental Load
- IMPACT – Corporate Social Responsibility in the EU
- Intelliekon – Acceptance of Electricity Consumption Feedback
- JET-SET - Emissions Trading as Social-Ecological Transformation Process
- KlimaAlltag – low carbon lifestyles in the zero emissions city
- Knowledge Transfer for Ecological Innovations
- Meta-Analysis of Gender and Research in Europe
- NaHa – Sustainable Practices in the Workplace and in Everyday Life
- netWORKS – Transformations in Network Related Infrastructure Sectors
- Power efficiency classes for households
- Quali-Set-Praxis - Practical Quality Assurance & Management in Health Promoting Settings
- RARE - Corporate Social Responsibility in Europe
- Scientific Back-Up for the Research Project EPSECC
- Sustainable Modernisation of Existing Buildings
- Target Group Orientation and Gender Specific Design for Consumer Policies