
Anthropocene Mobilities
Sustainable Travel and Caring for the Commons
Peter Cox(Author)
Bloomsbury Academic (Publisher)
Published on 24. July 2025
Book
Hardback
216 pages
978-1-350-46474-2 (ISBN)
Description
Sustainable travel expert Peter Cox shows how individual choices about how to move from one place to another shape the ways we relate to the world and to each other, and in turn, how all this shapes us as people and ultimately affects worldwide problems. If we regularly opt for more physically active forms of transport, such as cycling or walking, we foster qualities needed for living less destructively: we foster good anthropocene citizenship, a way of being in the contemporary world that includes responsibility for the consequences of our actions and responsiveness to the changing needs we encounter. This has important knock-on effects on a global scale: it helps to combat climate change, poor global health, and widespread social inequality, all of which are significantly impacted by the everyday travel habits of ordinary people, and particularly those in the Global North.
For its emphasis on the personal impacts of individual transport decisions and their relations to global social and environmental instability, Anthropocene Mobilities is ideal for students and informed readers eager to contribute to positive change in the world. For its novel application of Hartmut Rosa's theories to the field of mobilities studies, and for its developments of the concepts of anthropocene citizenship and mobile anthropocene citizens, it is also a must-read for scholars of international development, sociology, and environmental studies.
For its emphasis on the personal impacts of individual transport decisions and their relations to global social and environmental instability, Anthropocene Mobilities is ideal for students and informed readers eager to contribute to positive change in the world. For its novel application of Hartmut Rosa's theories to the field of mobilities studies, and for its developments of the concepts of anthropocene citizenship and mobile anthropocene citizens, it is also a must-read for scholars of international development, sociology, and environmental studies.
Reviews / Votes
Emanating from an established scholarly track of cycling sociology, Peter Cox argues for a new global environmental and planetary ethics of individuals and institutions in a world of increasing global problems - Anthropocene citizenship - and specifies it for a different mobility behavior - Anthropocene Mobilities. This book will pilot you from a variety of pathways towards Anthropocene citizenship to the congruously necessary degrowth of motor mobilities. Thus, it will provide even adept mobility scholars with new perspectives and inspirational stepstones. * Tadej Brezina, TU Wien Institute of Transportation * Professor Cox brilliantly deconstructs the deeply entrenched automobile-dominated transportation planning paradigm, offering a nuanced, interdisciplinary approach to reimagining cities, systems, public spaces, and mobility. This work transcends traditional transportation research by integrating critical yet undermined and overlooked perspectives on power, social equity, and the human experience, providing a transformative framework for understanding systems - and therefore system change. By challenging existing norms in academia and practice, Cox offers a compelling and empowered vision for the future of research: as academics, as researchers studying sustainable mobility, we can no longer not take a stand. * Meredith Glaser, professor of cycling, Ghent University, Belgium *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 154 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
460 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-350-46474-2 (9781350464742)
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 Classification
Person
Peter Cox is emeritus professor of sociology at the University of Chester, UK.
Content
Introduction
Chapter 1. Setting the Scene
Chapter 2. Anthropocene citizenship
Chapter 3. Being-in-the-world: care and commoning
Chapter 4. Pedagogies and mobilities: Learning and perception
Chapter 5. Human scale movement: Walking, wheeling, cycling
Chapter 6. Passengers and drivers
Chapter 7. Towards Anthropocene Mobilities
Chapter 1. Setting the Scene
Chapter 2. Anthropocene citizenship
Chapter 3. Being-in-the-world: care and commoning
Chapter 4. Pedagogies and mobilities: Learning and perception
Chapter 5. Human scale movement: Walking, wheeling, cycling
Chapter 6. Passengers and drivers
Chapter 7. Towards Anthropocene Mobilities