Published May 15, 2019 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Moving past the sustainable perspectives on transport: An attempt to mobilise critical urban transport studies with the right to the city

  • 1. Vrije Universiteit Brussel, COSMOPOLIS Centre for Urban Research
  • 2. Université libre de Bruxelles; Institut de Gestion de l'Environnement et d'Aménagement du Territoire

Description

The contemporary urban transport debate is increasingly versed in terms of “sustainable” development, placing social and environmental issues on the agenda. However, despite their heterogeneity, sustainable perspectives seldom engage with the explicitly political issues that shape the relationship between transport and urban development. In this paper, we propose to re-connect urban transport with political economic considerations, and thus to mobilise and strengthen “critical” perspectives on urban transport. We develop a framework for studying transport policies inspired by Henri Lefebvre's conceptualisation of “the right to the city”. The framework is illustrated with the empirical example of a “pedestrianisation” project in Brussels, a salient case of a “sustainable” transport policy. We demonstrate how ostensibly progressive intentions in terms of challenging local mobility paradigms do not necessarily translate into participative and transformative practices. Instead, they often embrace the established policy-makers, leave local power relations largely unaltered, support elite entrepreneurial agendas, and obfuscate the socio-spatially uneven landscapes of contemporary cities. We thus highlight the urgency of re-politicising urban transport theory and practice by seeking and revealing political economic choices, contradictions and conflicts that underpin transport policies interwoven with urban development dynamics.

Notes

This is an accepted manuscript version of the published article. To find the published article, please follow the DOI.

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Funding

HERA-JRP-PS – HERA Joint Research Programme Public Spaces: Culture and Integration in Europe 769478
European Commission