The conflictual governance of street experiments, between austerity and post-politics
Ersilia Verlinghieri,
Elisabetta Vitale Brovarone and
Luca Staricco
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Ersilia Verlinghieri: University of Oxford, UK
Elisabetta Vitale Brovarone: Politecnico di Torino, Italy
Luca Staricco: Politecnico di Torino, Italy
Urban Studies, 2024, vol. 61, issue 5, 878-899
Abstract:
Car dependency greatly contributes to the climate crisis and the corrosion of public space. In response, cities are introducing pedestrianisation, cycle lanes or tactical urban interventions aimed at repurposing streets for other road users. Framed as ‘experiments’, these reallocations of street space disrupt traditional transport planning procedures, often with promising results in promoting active travel. They are also associated with deep conflicts and criticism, especially by citizens defending the right to drive. Despite their ability to stop experiments, such conflicts have been little explored in the debates about experimentation and automobility. Similarly, street experiments have in most cases been uncritically embraced as a panacea for urban mobility problems, with little attention paid to experimentation as an expression of austerity urbanism. This paper aims to deepen our understanding of street experiments and their relationship to automobility by contextualising their conflictual unfolding as an expression of post-political planning in the age of austerity urbanism. Through a critical examination of the Torino Mobility Lab, a collaborative pedestrianisation experiment in Torino, we show how the governance-beyond-state setup of such projects masks a complex and contested coexistence of different meanings and processes for reimagining urban mobility and public space. We show how conflicts emerge embedded in the problematic and post-political governance of transport experiments. Nested within austerity urbanism, the experiment remains limited in its ability to create healthy spaces for participation. We conclude by highlighting the limitations and contradictions of attempts to overcome car dependency embedded in post-political frameworks and neoliberal-austerity planning practices.
Keywords: austerity; pedestrianisation; post-political; street experiments; transport governance; 紧缩; æ¥è¡ŒåŒ–; å Žæ”¿æ²»; 街头实验; äº¤é€šæ²»ç † (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sae:urbstu:v:61:y:2024:i:5:p:878-899
DOI: 10.1177/00420980231193860
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