Author(s)
De Greve Cian
Source

Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives, volume 34, november 2025

Organisation
Year
2025
Number of pages
11
Language
ENG
Good move

Urban sustainable mobility transitions are facing opposition, which undermines their odds of succeeding. Within a context of environmental distress, this poses an extra challenge to both policy makers and academics involved with sustainable mobility. Contemporary insights attribute these conflicts to rational self-interest or structural socio-economic factors. Approaching the issue from a political sociology perspective, our contribution introduces an additional motive for conflict: personal value orientations. The allocation of urban space can serve different purposes, such as car-centred accessibility or multimodal liveability, and is likely to be judged differently depending on one’s values. Our aim is to empirically verify which elements predict positioning within the conflict; and to what extent value orientations contribute. To this end, we elaborate on the controversy surrounding the Good Move-mobility plan in the Brussels municipality of Schaerbeek. Data were collected by a random walk-inspired method of door-to-door surveying (N = 178). Our findings paint a nuanced picture: Bicycle use is the strongest predictor for positioning within the mobility debate, while other modes don’t amount to such a clear impact. Socio-economic and value-based indicators proof to be relevant as well. Moreover, the distinct demographic profile of urban cyclists underlines the interconnectedness between these variables.

Publication type
Scientific publication
Category
Architecture / Urban Planning
Mobility
Region
Schaarbeek