Image for Understanding Urban Cycling: Exploring the Relationship Between Mobility, Sustainability and Capital

Understanding Urban Cycling: Exploring the Relationship Between Mobility, Sustainability and Capital (1st edition)

Part of the Routledge Equity, Justice and the Sustainable City series series
See all formats and editions

Academic interest in cycling has burgeoned in recent years with significant literature relating to the health and environmental benefits of cycling, the necessity for cycle-specific infrastructure, and the embodied experiences of cycling.

Based upon primary research in a variety of contexts such as London, Shanghai and Taipei, this book demonstrates that recent developments in urban cycling policy and practice are closely linked to broader processes of capital accumulation. It argues that cycling is increasingly caught up in discourses around Smart cities that emphasise technological solutions to environmental problems and neoliberal ideas on individual responsibility and biopolitical conduct, which only results in solutions that prioritise those who are already mobile. The central argument of the book is not that the popularisation of cycling is inherently bad, but that the manner in which cycling is being popularised gives cause for social and environmental concern. Ultimately the book argues that cycling has now become a vehicle for sustaining pro-growth agendas rather than subverting them or shifting to sustainable no-growth/de-growth and less technologically driven visions of modernity.

This book makes an innovative contribution to the fields of Cycling Studies, Mobilities and Transport and will be of interest to students and academics working in Human Geography, Transport Studies, Urban Studies, Urban Planning, Public Policy, Sociology and Sustainability.

Read More
Available
£150.00
Add Line Customisation
Available on VLeBooks
Add to List
Product Details
Routledge
1351007114 / 9781351007115
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
796.6
29/10/2020
England
English
240 pages
Copy: 30%; print: 30%
Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.