2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.tra.2019.01.023
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Safe, sustainable… but depoliticized and uneven – A critical view of urban transport policies in France

Abstract: This article offers a critical view of the contemporary urban policies undertaken in France in the name of safe, sustainable urban transport strategies. It seeks to show how a spatially and socially selective ordering is under way in French transport planning and policies by presenting an overview of research and empirical results dealing with the narratives and the implementation of these policies. Firstly, urban transport policies were analysed as narratives. Stressing users' individual responsibility and th… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…This in particular concerns the innovations that encourage people to save their carbon emissions and calories or contribute their data to help targeted investment in their cities as large infrastructural projects are supposedly too expensive to accomplish. Such findings resonate with existing research relating discourses on cycling and transport in general to neoliberalism (see Schwanen et al, 2011;Reigner and Brenac, 2019;Spinney, 2016). However, for a large share of innovations in our dataset it is the individual who is appealed to, rather than an urban authority, so the focus on individual contribution is to be expected.…”
Section: Smart Cycling Citizenssupporting
confidence: 88%
“…This in particular concerns the innovations that encourage people to save their carbon emissions and calories or contribute their data to help targeted investment in their cities as large infrastructural projects are supposedly too expensive to accomplish. Such findings resonate with existing research relating discourses on cycling and transport in general to neoliberalism (see Schwanen et al, 2011;Reigner and Brenac, 2019;Spinney, 2016). However, for a large share of innovations in our dataset it is the individual who is appealed to, rather than an urban authority, so the focus on individual contribution is to be expected.…”
Section: Smart Cycling Citizenssupporting
confidence: 88%
“…The planning and planning-related literature presents a variety of examples where capital accumulation processes have employed novel and highly ingenuous means to act against the public interest while depoliticizing institutions and downgrading democracy. This body of literature presents multiple theorizations and examples from both urban planning and land use policy (e.g., [38,[62][63][64][65]) and transport planning (e.g., [66,67]). Reigner and Brenac [66] alert their readers to a particularly ingenuous, and subtle, anti-democratic trend to be observed today in transport planning: the tendency to permeate transport policies with moralistic claims (e.g., "to move without creating pollution" or "to move but without harm").…”
Section: Innovation In Planning: a Most Needed Critical Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This body of literature presents multiple theorizations and examples from both urban planning and land use policy (e.g., [38,[62][63][64][65]) and transport planning (e.g., [66,67]). Reigner and Brenac [66] alert their readers to a particularly ingenuous, and subtle, anti-democratic trend to be observed today in transport planning: the tendency to permeate transport policies with moralistic claims (e.g., "to move without creating pollution" or "to move but without harm"). This apparently benign trend is problematic because policies implemented under such moralistic banners are very difficult to contest, even when they are creating significant problems in other, or even the same, moral terms.…”
Section: Innovation In Planning: a Most Needed Critical Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on questionable benefits of the FFPT towards supporting the sustainable development in terms of the car-use reduction, for which neglecting the issues of politically embodied transport poverty and inequality is typical [10,54,55], new rationale for FFPT adoption emerged recently. This new rationale understands FFPT not as a tool of the sustainable development to reduce negative externalities of excessive use of cars, but as an urban welfare policy which is opening our urbanities equally to everyone, no matter their income, race, gender, ethnicity, social status, place of residence, or car possession [16,25,33,41,43].…”
Section: The Changing Rationale Of the Ffpt Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%