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Community Carsharing and the Social–Ecological Mobility Transition PDF

243 Pages·2022·3.298 MB·English
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Community Carsharing and the – Social Ecological Mobility Transition Thisbookinvestigateshowpracticesofcommunitycarsharingareinfluencing everyday mobility. It argues that hegemonic practices of automobility are reconfigured through practices of community carsharing, thereby challenging capitalistmobilitiesintherealmofeverydaylife. Throughadetailedempiricalstudyofpracticesofcommunitycarsharingand itspractitionersintheruralregionsaroundMunich,Germany,thisbookreveals how the practice contributes to the emergence of alternative automobile prac- tices, meanings, identities and subjectivities. It also explores the embedding of automobility into its ecological context, the connection of function and com- munity in practices of community carsharing and the changing of ownership relations through a process of commoning mobility. This reconfiguration of everydaypracticesofautomobilitytakesplacethroughtheprocessesofeveryday resistance, re-embedding and commoning, and ultimately results in the emer- genceofanalternativemobilityculture,therebyfacilitatingthedisseminationof analternativecommonsenseofcommunitycarsharing. This book on community carsharing provides a valuable insight into car- sharinginruralsettingsandexemplifieshowcarsharingspecifically,andshar- ing mobilities in general, can contribute to a social–ecological mobility transition.Theworkwillbeofparticularinteresttoscholarsandpractitioners workinginmobilitystudiesandmobilities. Luca Nitschke completed his Ph.D. at the Munich Center for Technology in Society(MCTS)andNürtingen-GeislingenUniversityasamemberofthemobil. LABDoctoralResearchGroup,fundedbytheHans-Böckler-Foundation,located at the Chair for Urban Structure and Transport Planning at the Technical UniversityofMunich.Heworks attheInstitutefor Social–EcologicalResearch (ISOE) in Frankfurt. His research interests lie in the relationship between mobilitypractices,capitalismandprocessesofchange. HestudiedEnvironmental Sciences inBielefeldandEnvironmentalStudies in Barcelona, Aveiro, Aalborg and New York City, and he is a founding member of the Center for Emancipatory Technology (ZET), Basel. Networked Urban Mobilities Series Editors: Sven Kesselring, Nürtingen-Geislingen University, Germany and Malene Freudendal-Pedersen, Roskilde University, Denmark The Networked Urban Mobilities series resulted from the Cosmobilities Network of mobility research and the Taylor & Francis journal Applied Mobilities. This three volume set, ideal for mobilities researchers and practi- tioners, explores a broad number of topics including planning, architecture, geographyandurbandesign. Experiencing Networked Urban Mobilities Practices, Flows, Methods Edited by Malene Freudndal-Pedersen, Katrine Hartmann-Petersen and Emmy Laura Perez Fjalland Envisioning Networked Urban Mobilities Art, Creativity, Performance Edited by Aslak Aamot Kjaerulff, Sven Kesselring, Peter Peters and Kevin Hannam Networked Urban Mobilities Edited by Malene Freudendal-Pedersen and Sven Kesselring Sharing Mobilities New Perspectives for the Mobile Risk Society Edited by Sven Kesselring, Malene Freudendal-Pedersen, and Dennis Zuev Nurturing Mobilities Family Travel in the 21st Century Claire Maxwell, Miri Yemini and Katrine Mygind Bach Europe Beyond Mobility Mobilities, Social Cohesion and Political Integration Vincent Kaufmann, Ander Audikana and Guillaume Drevon Community Carsharing and the Social–Ecological Mobility Transition Luca Nitschke For more information about this series, please visit: https://www.routledge. com/Networked-Urban-Mobilities-Series/book-series/NUM Community Carsharing and the – Social Ecological Mobility Transition Luca Nitschke Coverimage:GettyImages,ImageID:945210670 Firstpublished2023 byRoutledge 605ThirdAvenue,NewYork,NY10158 andbyRoutledge 4ParkSquare,MiltonPark,Abingdon,OxonOX144RN RoutledgeisanimprintoftheTaylor&FrancisGroup,aninforma business ©2023LucaNitschke TherightofLucaNitschketobeidentifiedasauthorofthisworkhas beenassertedinaccordancewithsections77and78oftheCopyright, DesignsandPatentsAct1988. Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthisbookmaybereprintedorreproduced orutilisedinanyformorbyanyelectronic,mechanical,orothermeans, nowknownorhereafterinvented,includingphotocopyingandrecording, orinanyinformationstorageorretrievalsystem,withoutpermissionin writingfromthepublishers. Trademarknotice:Productorcorporatenamesmaybetrademarksor registeredtrademarks,andareusedonlyforidentificationand explanationwithoutintenttoinfringe. LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Names:Nitschke,Luca,author. Title:Communitycarsharingandthesocial–ecologicalmobilitytransition/ LucaNitschke. Description:NewYork,NY:Routledge,2022.|Includesbibliographical referencesandindex.| Identifiers:LCCN2022002618(print)|LCCN2022002619(ebook)| ISBN9781032205885(hardback)| ISBN9781032205908(paperback)|ISBN9781003264279(ebook) Subjects:LCSH:Carsharing--Germany--Munich.|Automobiles--Social aspects--Germany--Munich.|Urbantransportation--Socialaspects-- Germany--Munich.|Communitylife--Germany--Munich. Classification:LCCHE5669.M85N582022(print)|LCCHE5669.M85 (ebook)|DDC388.4/1321--dc23/eng/20220126 LCrecordavailableathttps://lccn.loc.gov/2022002618 LCebookrecordavailableathttps://lccn.loc.gov/2022002619 ISBN:978-1-032-20588-5(hbk) ISBN:978-1-032-20590-8(pbk) ISBN:978-1-003-26427-9(ebk) DOI:10.4324/9781003264279 TypesetinSabon byTaylor&FrancisBooks For Jaron and Sinan in the hope to overcome DMD KIU LIDT // TMO CIO LIS Contents List of illustrations viii Foreword ix SVENKESSELRING Preface xiii 1 Capitalist mobilities, sharing mobilities and the need for reconfiguring the everyday 1 2 Empirical introduction: Investigating community carsharing 42 3 Reconstituting automobility: Changing the meanings of the car and (auto)mobility 62 4 Re-embedding automobility: Ecological critique and counter- hegemonic practice 90 Interlude: The collective and organizational character of everyday life 122 5 “We do it together for us”: Community, collective identity and social re-embedding 128 6 Commoning mobility: Community carsharing and changing ownership 158 7 Community carsharing and the social–ecological mobility transition 187 Index 226 Illustrations Figures 2.1 Total number of cars (dark grey) and number of cars per 100 inhabitants (light grey) in Munich for the years 2005–2020 43 2.2 Modal split for Munich and the Greater Region in the years 2008 and 2017 44 3.1 Main Street of Königsbrunn, where mobility is understandably cumbersome without a car 74 4.1 The town center of Grafing: the catastrophe of automobility 104 5.1 Car-cleaning party in Markt Schwaben: building community while cleaning cars 131 7.1 Aspects of the emerging alternative mobility culture 200 Tables 1.1 Aspects of the emancipatory potentialand neoliberal co-option of sharing mobilities 16 2.1 Interviews on the different forms of community carsharing 48 2.2 Overview of all interviewees with pseudonym, socio-demographics, form of sharing, position/relationship within the association or arrangement, duration and car ownership in addition to the shared car 49 2.3 Introduction to the 24 association members interviewed from the carsharing associations 54 2.4 Overview of the possible categorizations of private carsharing 57 2.5 Introducing the 17 people in the eleven private carsharing arrangements 58 Foreword Sven Kesselring Mobilityandtransportarestillthebiggestheadacheforpoliciesforsustainable developmentandinfightingclimatechange.Sincetheearly1990shighratesof CO and other greenhouse gasses have been emitted constantly. In European 2 countries, all other sectors such as energy, heating and agriculture have been reducingemissionssteadily.Butnotsomobilityandtransport. Against this background, politics, industry and civil society need innova- tive ideas and concepts – not forgetting data and analyses – to design and conceptualize policies that reach people’s realities and life worlds. But the thousand-dollar question here is: Where to look for and where to find the right approaches and entry points for climate policies that generate reso- nances and impact on the human scale? Within Paul Feyerabend’s philosophy of science (Feyerabend 1978) coun- ter-intuitive thinking or the methodology of thinking outside the box, a technique to approach social innovation and step out of long overdue path dependencies, has emerged. For Austrian, future researcher Robert Jungk the so-called utopian phase has become a key element of his future work- shop methodology (Jungk and Müllert 1987). Participants are not only allowed but even obliged to ‘fly’ intellectually as high as possible and this has turned out to be an excellent and smart instrument to generate innova- tive solutions – from neighborhood projects to urban renewals and indus- trial product design. Today, trendy approaches and management tools and methods such as agile management, design thinking and so forth are taking advantage of these ideas. Some of them are coming bottom up from grass- rootsinitiatives,otherseven frominsurgentactivistpolicies andmovements. In fact, although modern societies are almost obsessed or at least pre- occupied with discourse on innovation and invention, they suffer from a fundamental lack of alternative ways of thinking, planning and designing solutions and products, specifically those that meet people’s needs and wants. They are too locked in to instrumental and, often, technocentric thinking and acting. Angela Merkel’s once iconic words about German or European politics as being “without alternatives” describe this mindset and a perception of reality’s and modern societies’ potential to shape, influence and structure their own course and futures.

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