The disruptive traveller? : a Foucaldian analysis of cycleways.

Author(s)
Bonham, J. & Cox, P.
Year
Abstract

This paper examines how the widespread introduction of segregated cycle facilities in recent years, while having undoubted benefits can also be seen to raise significant problems for cycling in the context of broader travel behaviours. Drawing on the insights of Michel Foucault, we have examined texts on cycleways in the United Kingdom and Australia, historical and contemporary, for the way in which cyclists are constituted and positioned. The findings are complex. Overall, recent texts produced within the health sciences begin to normalise cycling, while those produced within the field of transport position cyclists as disruptive or deviant travelers. In each case, the cycleway becomes a special space that enables and constrains cycling, while cycle practices are constituted as slow and disorderly, leisurely, often social and always requiring a quiet (both in terms of traffic and noise) context. We conclude that the cycleway, by removing cyclists from road space, ultimately operates to maintain rather than challenge existing travel norms. We argue the consequences of this segregation may be profoundly at odds with the potential of cycling as a core component of sustainable mobility. (a).

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Publication

Library number
I E219564 /72 /83 / ITRD E219564
Source

Road and Transport Research. 2010 /06. 19(2) Pp42-53

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.