Provides a critical examination of existing cycling structures alongside current policies and practices used to promote cycling in Europe. Considering the cultural politics of infrastructure, urban space wars and questions of safety and risk, it provides policy solutions for sustainable cities. Contributors show infrastructural provision to be an intensely political act and its meaning variable according to larger political processes and contexts.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
"Full of compelling insights from some of the leading cycling researchers in the world, this volume brings the politics of infrastructure to bear in vibrant case studies of why and how cities continue to marginalize cycling despite its many known benefits." Mimi Sheller, Drexel University "In a day and age where human-powered mobility modes are praised for their sustainable potential, it is sobering to read this research showing the contested and stratified nature of velomobility across cities and societies." Ole B. Jensen, Aalborg University "An exciting and illuminating up and down ride through cycling infrastructures, policies and bike practices around different cities in the world."
Professor Jonas Larsen, Roskilde University, Denmark.
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Illustrationen
10 s/w Tabellen, 28 s/w Abbildungen
Maße
Höhe: 240 mm
Breite: 161 mm
Dicke: 19 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-4473-4515-2 (9781447345152)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Till Koglin is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Technology and Society, Faculty of Engineering at Lund University.
Peter Cox is a Professor at the Department of Social and Political Science, University of Chester, UK
Introduction
Peter Cox and Till Koglin
Chapter 1 Theorising infrastructure: a politics of spaces and edges
Peter Cox
Chapter 2 The cultural politics of infrastructure: the case of Louis Botha Avenue in Johannesburg, South Africa
Njogu Morgan
Chapter 3 Spatial dimensions of the marginalisation of cycling - marginalisation through rationalisation?
Till Koglin
Chapter 4 Mental barriers in planning for cycling
Tadej Brezina, Ulrich Leth and Helmut Lemmerer
Chapter 5 Safety, risk and road traffic danger: towards a transformational approach to the dominant ideology
John Whitelegg
Chapter 6 What constructs a Cycle City? A comparison of policy narratives in Newcastle and Bremen
Katja Leyendecker
Chapter 7 Hard Work in Paradise. The contested making of Amsterdam as a cycling city
Fred Feddes, Marjolein de Lange & Marco te Broemmelstroet
Chapter 8 Conflictual Politics of Sustainability: cycling organisations and the OEresund crossing
Martin Emanuel
Chapter 9 Velomobility in Copenhagen - a perfect world?
Malene Freudendal-Pedersen
Chapter 10 Navigating cycling infrastructure in Sofia, Bulgaria
Anna Plyushteva and Andrew Barnfield
Chapter 11 Cycling advocacy in Sao Paulo: influence and effects in politics
Leticia Lindenberg Lemos
Conclusions
Till Koglin and Peter Cox