Bicycle Justice and Urban Transformation
Biking for All?
Herausgeber: Golub, Aaron; Sandoval, Gerardo; Lugo, Adonia; Hoffmann, Melody
Bicycle Justice and Urban Transformation
Biking for All?
Herausgeber: Golub, Aaron; Sandoval, Gerardo; Lugo, Adonia; Hoffmann, Melody
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This book provides the standards for equitable bicycle advocacy, policy, and planning by defining and operationalizing bicycle justice. In synthesizing the projects of critical cultural studies, transportation justice, and planning as applied practice, this book reveals the relevance of civil rights and social justice concerns to public interventions intended to increase cycling.
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This book provides the standards for equitable bicycle advocacy, policy, and planning by defining and operationalizing bicycle justice. In synthesizing the projects of critical cultural studies, transportation justice, and planning as applied practice, this book reveals the relevance of civil rights and social justice concerns to public interventions intended to increase cycling.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 294
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Juli 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 163mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 544g
- ISBN-13: 9781138950245
- ISBN-10: 1138950246
- Artikelnr.: 43033062
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 294
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Juli 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 163mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 544g
- ISBN-13: 9781138950245
- ISBN-10: 1138950246
- Artikelnr.: 43033062
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Aaron Golub is Associate Professor in the Nohad A. Toulan School of Urban Studies and Planning at Portland State University, Oregon, USA. Melody L. Hoffmann is a mass communication instructor at Anoka Ramsey Community College near Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. Adonia E. Lugo is an urban anthropologist and co-founder of the Bicicultures network, USA. Gerardo F. Sandoval is Associate Professor at the Department of Planning, Public Policy and Management and the Co-Director of the Center for Latino/a and Latin American Studies at the University of Oregon, USA.
1. Introduction: Creating an Inclusionary Bicycle Justice Movement 2. Is
the right to bicycle a civil right? Synergies and tensions between the
transportation justice movement and planning for bicycling 3. Is Portland's
Bicycle Success Story a Celebration of Gentrification? A theoretical and
statistical analysis of bicycle use and demographic change 4. Freedom of
movement / Freedom of choice: An enquiry into utility cycling and social
justice in post-apartheid Cape Town, 1994-2015 5. Advocating Through Data:
Community Visibilities in Crowdsourced Cycling Data 6. Advancing
discussions of cycling interventions based on social justice 7. Theorizing
Bicycle Justice Using Social Psychology: Examining the Intersection of Mode
and Race with the Conceptual Model of Roadway Interactions 8. Delivering
(in)Justice: Food Delivery Cyclists in New York City 9. Rascuache Cycling
Justice 10. No Choice But to Bike: Undocumented and bike-dependent in rust
belt America 11. Aburrido! Cycling on the U.S./Mexican Border with Doble
Rueda Bicycle Collective in Matamoros, Tamaulipas 12. Civil Bikes:
Embracing Atlanta's racialized history through bicycle tours 13.
Decentering Whiteness in Organized Bicycling: Notes from Inside 14.
Community Bicycle Workshops and "Invisible Cyclists" in Brussels 15.
Community Disengagement: The Greatest Barrier to Equitable Bike Share 16.
No Hay Peor Lucha Que La Que No Se Hace: Re-negotiating cycling in a Latino
community 17. Collectively Subverting the Status Quo at the Youth Bike
Summit 18. Mediating the 'White Lanes of Gentrification' in Humboldt Park:
Community-Led economic development and the struggle over public space
the right to bicycle a civil right? Synergies and tensions between the
transportation justice movement and planning for bicycling 3. Is Portland's
Bicycle Success Story a Celebration of Gentrification? A theoretical and
statistical analysis of bicycle use and demographic change 4. Freedom of
movement / Freedom of choice: An enquiry into utility cycling and social
justice in post-apartheid Cape Town, 1994-2015 5. Advocating Through Data:
Community Visibilities in Crowdsourced Cycling Data 6. Advancing
discussions of cycling interventions based on social justice 7. Theorizing
Bicycle Justice Using Social Psychology: Examining the Intersection of Mode
and Race with the Conceptual Model of Roadway Interactions 8. Delivering
(in)Justice: Food Delivery Cyclists in New York City 9. Rascuache Cycling
Justice 10. No Choice But to Bike: Undocumented and bike-dependent in rust
belt America 11. Aburrido! Cycling on the U.S./Mexican Border with Doble
Rueda Bicycle Collective in Matamoros, Tamaulipas 12. Civil Bikes:
Embracing Atlanta's racialized history through bicycle tours 13.
Decentering Whiteness in Organized Bicycling: Notes from Inside 14.
Community Bicycle Workshops and "Invisible Cyclists" in Brussels 15.
Community Disengagement: The Greatest Barrier to Equitable Bike Share 16.
No Hay Peor Lucha Que La Que No Se Hace: Re-negotiating cycling in a Latino
community 17. Collectively Subverting the Status Quo at the Youth Bike
Summit 18. Mediating the 'White Lanes of Gentrification' in Humboldt Park:
Community-Led economic development and the struggle over public space
1. Introduction: Creating an Inclusionary Bicycle Justice Movement 2. Is
the right to bicycle a civil right? Synergies and tensions between the
transportation justice movement and planning for bicycling 3. Is Portland's
Bicycle Success Story a Celebration of Gentrification? A theoretical and
statistical analysis of bicycle use and demographic change 4. Freedom of
movement / Freedom of choice: An enquiry into utility cycling and social
justice in post-apartheid Cape Town, 1994-2015 5. Advocating Through Data:
Community Visibilities in Crowdsourced Cycling Data 6. Advancing
discussions of cycling interventions based on social justice 7. Theorizing
Bicycle Justice Using Social Psychology: Examining the Intersection of Mode
and Race with the Conceptual Model of Roadway Interactions 8. Delivering
(in)Justice: Food Delivery Cyclists in New York City 9. Rascuache Cycling
Justice 10. No Choice But to Bike: Undocumented and bike-dependent in rust
belt America 11. Aburrido! Cycling on the U.S./Mexican Border with Doble
Rueda Bicycle Collective in Matamoros, Tamaulipas 12. Civil Bikes:
Embracing Atlanta's racialized history through bicycle tours 13.
Decentering Whiteness in Organized Bicycling: Notes from Inside 14.
Community Bicycle Workshops and "Invisible Cyclists" in Brussels 15.
Community Disengagement: The Greatest Barrier to Equitable Bike Share 16.
No Hay Peor Lucha Que La Que No Se Hace: Re-negotiating cycling in a Latino
community 17. Collectively Subverting the Status Quo at the Youth Bike
Summit 18. Mediating the 'White Lanes of Gentrification' in Humboldt Park:
Community-Led economic development and the struggle over public space
the right to bicycle a civil right? Synergies and tensions between the
transportation justice movement and planning for bicycling 3. Is Portland's
Bicycle Success Story a Celebration of Gentrification? A theoretical and
statistical analysis of bicycle use and demographic change 4. Freedom of
movement / Freedom of choice: An enquiry into utility cycling and social
justice in post-apartheid Cape Town, 1994-2015 5. Advocating Through Data:
Community Visibilities in Crowdsourced Cycling Data 6. Advancing
discussions of cycling interventions based on social justice 7. Theorizing
Bicycle Justice Using Social Psychology: Examining the Intersection of Mode
and Race with the Conceptual Model of Roadway Interactions 8. Delivering
(in)Justice: Food Delivery Cyclists in New York City 9. Rascuache Cycling
Justice 10. No Choice But to Bike: Undocumented and bike-dependent in rust
belt America 11. Aburrido! Cycling on the U.S./Mexican Border with Doble
Rueda Bicycle Collective in Matamoros, Tamaulipas 12. Civil Bikes:
Embracing Atlanta's racialized history through bicycle tours 13.
Decentering Whiteness in Organized Bicycling: Notes from Inside 14.
Community Bicycle Workshops and "Invisible Cyclists" in Brussels 15.
Community Disengagement: The Greatest Barrier to Equitable Bike Share 16.
No Hay Peor Lucha Que La Que No Se Hace: Re-negotiating cycling in a Latino
community 17. Collectively Subverting the Status Quo at the Youth Bike
Summit 18. Mediating the 'White Lanes of Gentrification' in Humboldt Park:
Community-Led economic development and the struggle over public space