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Grand Narratives for sustainable mobility: A conceptual review

Erling Holden, David Banister, Stefan Gössling, Geoffrey Gilpin, Kristin Linnerud

2020Energy Research & Social Science188 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The concept of sustainable mobility has had a relatively short life, first being used about 30 years ago. In that time, some progress has been made, but transport is still not contributing enough to the internationally set reduction targets for carbon emissions. This paper provides a conceptual review that presents nine narratives addressing elements of sustainable mobility, each of which has been derived from a review of the agents and strategies taken over the last 30 years. From these narratives, we develop three Grand Narratives that bring together the key elements identified from the wider set of narratives—low mobility societies, collective transport 2.0, and electromobility. We then assess each of the three Grand Narratives in terms of its feasibility, acceptability, centrality, and compatibility. We conclude that each of the Grand Narratives provides a necessary but insufficient condition for achieving sustainable mobility. Thus, although each one has the potential to make significant contribution to sustainable mobility, it is only through the strong and immediate application of all three that the goal of sustainable mobility can be achieved.

Topics & Concepts

NarrativeSustainable developmentCentralitySociologyComputer sciencePolitical scienceArtLiteratureMathematicsCombinatoricsLawTransportation and Mobility InnovationsUrban Transport and AccessibilityElectric Vehicles and Infrastructure
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