Index

Shaping Smart Mobility Futures: Governance and Policy Instruments in times of Sustainability Transitions

ISBN: 978-1-83982-651-1, eISBN: 978-1-83982-650-4

Publication date: 13 August 2020

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2020), "Index", Paulsson, A. and Sørensen, C.H. (Ed.) Shaping Smart Mobility Futures: Governance and Policy Instruments in times of Sustainability Transitions, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 221-227. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83982-650-420201013

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020 Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Note: Page numbers followed by “n” indicate footnotes.

Accessibility
, 3, 5, 39, 48, 50, 95, 97, 128, 162, 164, 187, 190, 192, 195, 205

Accidents
, 173

Accountability
, 21

barriers
, 31–32

scenarios used in interviews
, 26–27

Accountability regimes
, 22

current
, 28–30

future
, 30–31

Administrative instruments
, 6

Affordances
, 9–10

Australia
, 11, 92, 96, 106, 114–115, 195, 210

Australian transport agencies
, 113–114

Authority/authorities
, 2–3, 8, 10, 23, 32–33, 142, 149, 155, 156–158, 163

Automated vehicles
, 38

CLDs
, 40–41, 45–50

costs
, 39

driverless vehicles
, 38–39

effects
, 41–42

literature search
, 39–40

sustainability goals
, 39

Automation
, 11, 37–40, 49, 58, 158

Autonomous vehicles (AVs)
, 76, 92–93, 97, 149, 188, 190

pilot schemes to test
, 198

and public transport in rural areas
, 193–196

‘Backcasting’ techniques
, 95

Behaviour
, 6

Bemelmans-Videc
, 8

Betamax/VHS
, 112

Bird
, 170–171, 173

BMW
, 204

Breng flex
, 193

Capping of fleet sizes
, 178

Car-free zones
, 3

Carpooling
, 191–192

Car-sharing
, 2, 91, 192, 210

Carbon-free transport
, 187

Causal loop diagrams (CLDs)
, 38, 40–41, 45–46

analysis
, 47–48

as collaboration tool
, 50

components
, 40

reflections from sustainability perspective
, 49–50

reflections on needs for policies
, 48–49

Change
, 5, 20, 60, 63, 115, 140, 143–144, 146, 180, 188, 217

Charges and fees
, 179

Citizen
, 131

Citizen assembly
, 219

Citizen participation
, 203–213

Climate crisis
, 3–4, 214

Co-design of regulation
, 116

Co-production of regulation
, 116

Collaboration
, 130–131

necessity for
, 126–128

Combined Authorities
, 23–24, 30

Committee on Climate Change (CCC)
, 140

Competition
, 30, 32, 49, 58, 61, 105, 113, 116, 129, 159, 173–174, 177, 190, 210

Complex networks
, 38

Complexity
, 22, 31–34, 63, 76, 91, 95–96, 111, 122, 126, 197

Compulsory data sharing
, 179

Congestion
, 205

Connected and autonomous vehicles (CAVs)
, 59

Contracts
, 30, 107, 110, 114, 126, 157, 178

Cost[s]
, 39

coverage
, 190

Customers
, 31, 91, 128, 209, 217, 220

Daimler
, 204

Danish model
, 196

Data
, 90–91

Data management

regulations
, 157, 163

rules for
, 160

Decision making
, 23, 60, 94, 128, 147, 207, 214

Degree of urbanisation classification (DEGURBA)
, 188

Delegation of MLG
, 63–64

Deliberation
, 205, 215

Demand Responsive Transport (DRT)
, 189, 190, 195

Democracy
, 131, 207, 218–219

Democratic processes
, 11, 113

Demography
, 91–92

Digital data
, 162

Digital technology
, 203–204

Digitalisation
, 219

Digitalised data
, 156

Dockless
, 20, 25, 28–29, 31, 64, 169–170, 176–178, 181

Drive Sweden
, 123, 125, 127

Driverless

taxi
, 41–42

technology
, 49

vehicles
, 38–39, 42

DRS
, 90, 92–93

Economic policy measure
, 188

Economic theory
, 48

Electric vehicle technologies (EV technologies)
, 90

ElectriCity
, 125

Electric scooter (E-scooters)
, 176–177, 210

policy instruments and regulatory tools
, 177–180

regulation
, 172–177

shared dockless
, 172

Elite
, 217–218

Employees and competencies
, 157–158, 161

Employees and skills
, 164

England, local transport governance in
, 22–25

Equity
, 67

Existing infrastructure
, 157–158, 161, 164

Experiments
, 120, 122, 124, 127–128, 130–131, 208

Experimental governance
, 120

collaboration
, 130–131

learning by ‘doing’
, 124–126, 129–130

necessity for collaboration
, 126–128

need for exceptional solutions
, 128–129

need for extraordinary solutions
, 122–124

as policy instrument
, 122

policy instrumentation perspective on
, 121–122

Expert knowledge
, 11, 218

External costs of transport
, 173

Externalities
, 173

argument
, 115

Extraordinary problem
, 128

Extraordinary solutions
, 131–132

need for
, 122–124

Feedback loop
, 190

Financial instruments
, 6

First- and last-mile problem
, 192

5G technology
, 49

FlexDanmark
, 196

Freight transport
, 42

Fungibility
, 142

Future accountability

positions
, 30

regimes
, 30–31

Gaming and tactics of policy making
, 63–64

Generalised travel costs
, 39

Geofencing
, 177–178

Geographic variation
, 92

Goals
, 2–3, 5, 7, 20–21, 34, 39, 43, 48, 51, 63, 66, 124, 128–129, 141, 149, 175, 205–206

Gothenburg
, 109, 125, 195

Governable
, 217, 220

Governance (see also Multi-level governance (MLG))
, 153–154, 217–220

demand for
, 154

local transport governance in England
, 22–25

need for
, 2–3

and policies
, 49

Governance powers
, 23–24, 69

Governance structures
, 11, 62, 147

Governing capacity
, 154–155, 209

analytical approach
, 155–156

categorisations of current policy instruments
, 156–158

operationalisation of four NATO resources
, 158

of regulations for traffic, drivers and vehicles
, 160

in smart mobility futures
, 158–164

Government activity
, 142

Greater London Authority
, 23n1

Greater Manchester Combined Authority
, 24

Group Model Building
, 40–41

Hands-off approach
, 176–177

Hierarchy
, 63

Hood and Margetts
, 142–143, 155–156

Howlett
, 4, 8, 141–145, 149, 204

Inclusion
, 67

Individualism
, 155, 158–159

Induced demand
, 93–94

Information and communication technology (ICT)
, 188, 190, 195

and public transport in rural areas
, 192–193

Information asymmetries
, 67

Informative instruments
, 6

Infrastructure investments
, 157, 160, 163

Innovation
, 219

Innovation journey
, 218

Innovation policy
, 149, 208, 218

Inputs
, 90–91

Institutions
, 23, 58–63, 65–67, 154, 218–219

Integration
, 31, 34, 62, 147–148, 178, 192–193, 197, 208

Intelligent transport systems (ITS)
, 156

International academic collaborations
, 116

International Transport Forum (ITF)
, 2, 177–178, 190

Interoperability
, 197

Interviews
, 24–25

Knowledge technology
, 97

KOMPIS
, 127

Laissez-faire approach
, 180

Land use and planning
, 160

Land-use policy
, 7

Lascoumes, P
, 8–10, 120–121, 131

Le Galés, P
, 8–10, 120–121, 131

Learning
, 29, 120, 124, 126, 130, 149, 180, 210

Learning by ‘doing’
, 124–126, 129–130

Legislation in Norway
, 171

Legitimacy
, 8, 11, 60, 62–63, 70, 76, 121, 179, 206–207, 219

Littering
, 175

Living labs
, 124

Local accountability arrangements
, 21–22

Local transport governance in England
, 22–25

Location
, 93–94

Low carbon mobility
, 140

‘Map mash-up’ workshops
, 95

Marginal cost
, 39

of cars and road freight vehicles
, 47

of road transport
, 50–51

Market
, 159

Market failure
, 173–175

Meta-instrument
, 9

Metropolitan Strategic Authorities
, 147–148

Micromobility
, 169–170

E-scooter regulation
, 172–177

policy instruments and regulatory tools
, 177–180

Milton Keynes Council (MKC)
, 29

Minimising regulatory barriers
, 177

Mobike
, 28

Mobility as a Service (MaaS)
, 2, 20, 59, 64, 106, 126, 129, 140, 146, 148, 217

MaaS Global
, 28

MaaS-solution
, 130

Mobility Data Specification (MDS)
, 179

Mobility management
, 6

Mobility service
, 91, 120, 162, 209–210

Modal shares
, 93

Model design
, 90–91

Modelling
, 2, 40, 76–78, 90–91, 94–96, 193, 195, 207

Monopolies
, 19, 106–107, 109, 114–116

Multi-level governance (MLG) (see also Governance)
, 58–62

(dis)advantages
, 62

case study policy instruments
, 67–70

delegation, gaming and tactics of policy making
, 63–64

new policy instruments ‘test’ MLG arrangements
, 64–67

Multi-purpose institutions
, 61

Multi-stakeholder context
, 11

Municipality
, 130

Mutual dialogue in social networks
, 156, 162

‘National’ policy responsibility
, 61

Network

capacity assumptions
, 92–93

management
, 64

New public policy instruments
, 120

Nimble government
, 113

Nimble private sector
, 106

Nodality
, 142, 155–156, 158, 162

competition for
, 159

Nodality, Authority, Treasure and Organisation (NATO)
, 142, 156–158

Objectives
, 2–4, 76, 95, 107, 113, 124, 149, 173, 177, 181, 205

Open Mobility Foundation
, 182

‘Open-minded’ governance structures
, 147

Organization/organisation
, 142, 155, 157–158

Organisational change
, 196–197

Oslo
, 114, 170, 172–173, 181

Parlance policy instruments
, 142

Participant selection
, 24–25

Participatory workshops
, 95

Partnership(s)
, 30, 32, 110, 112–114, 127, 181

Passenger transport
, 41–42

Passenger Transport Authority (PTA)
, 172

Pedestrianisation
, 3

Penalties
, 179

Person-kilometres travelled (PKT)
, 41

‘Physical’ policy instrument
, 5

Pilot schemes
, 180

to test AVs
, 198

Planning
, 75–102

Planning support tools (PSTs)
, 76

approach
, 77–78

data, inputs, and model design
, 90–91

geographic variation
, 92

limitations of PSTs to policy-makers
, 90

mobility type definitions
, 72

modal shares and impact on public transport
, 93

network capacity assumptions
, 92–93

publications reviewed by geography and mode
, 73–89

roles in shaping ‘smart’ urban futures
, 94–96

smart mobility ‘knowledge’
, 90

smart mobility knowledge and limitations of modelling analyses
, 72, 90

transport demand, location, and induced demand
, 93–94

trip purpose and demography
, 91–92

typical organisation of transport planning project
, 77

Planning system
, 112

Policy
, 141–143, 207

alignment
, 58, 207

capacity
, 154

instrumentation perspective on experimental governance
, 121–122

policy making, gaming and tactics of
, 63–64

taxonomy
, 141

Policy acceptance
, 206–207

Policy action
, 61

Policy change
, 140

catalysts for
, 143–144

Policy instruments
, 3–5, 141–143, 208–211

background literature on impacts and needs
, 41–43, 45

case study
, 67–70

cost-effectiveness
, 8

development
, 206–208

experimental governance as
, 122–131

knowledge production
, 8–9

limits of
, 9–10

need for
, 205–206

new policy instruments ‘test’ MLG arrangements
, 64–67

research on
, 7–8

smart mobility as
, 146–149

transport sector goals
, 43–44

used to govern transport
, 5–7

Policy-makers, limitations of PSTs to
, 90

Policymaking
, 60, 207

Policy moment
, 63, 66–67, 207

Policy package
, 10

Pragmatic approach
, 8–9

Pragmatism
, 111

Political institution
, 219

Pricing
, 67–69

Private actors
, 116

Private Hire Vehicles (PHVs)
, 28

Private sector perspectives
, 109–114

Proactive governance
, 146

Process values
, 121

Proportionality principle
, 177

Public

actors
, 116, 120

good
, 106, 112

policy principles
, 20

sector perspectives
, 108–109

space
, 174

Public transport, PSTs impact on
, 93

Public Transport Authority (PTA)
, 193

Public transport in rural areas (see also Urban transport systems)

AVs and
, 193–196

challenges and solutions
, 190–192

ICT and
, 192–193

need for
, 189–190

organisational changes and removal of regulatory barriers
, 196–197

pilot schemes to test AVs
, 198

policy suggestions for new solutions
, 196

user-centred design
, 197–198

Public values
, 4, 120–121, 128–130, 207, 209

R&D efforts
, 6–7, 160, 163

Reactive organisation with decreased capacity
, 161

Real life environment
, 132

Realitylab Göteborg
, 125

Reflexive governance
, 149

Reflexivity
, 149–150, 209

Regulation
, 109, 170, 172–177, 181

Regulations for land use and planning
, 157

Regulations for traffic
, 157

Regulatory impact assessment (RIA)
, 177

Regulatory barrier
, 177, 181, 196–198

Regulatory sandboxes
, 180–181

Research
, 6, 8, 91, 108, 126

Ride-hailing
, 114–115, 210–211

Ridesharing
, 64, 66, 69–70, 91, 93, 210–211

Rist, Ray C.
, 8

Ruled
, 210–214

Rulers
, 210–214

Rural areas
, 187–198

Road investments, need for
, 160

Roadspace allocation
, 69–70

Scope and structure of state
, 157–158, 161, 164

Shared mobility

breakthrough of
, 161–164

solutions
, 1–2

Sharing economy
, 155, 161–164

Smart mobility
, 2, 57–58, 119–120, 140, 153, 208–211

accountability barriers
, 31–32

benefits and risks
, 20–21

current accountability regimes
, 28–30

developments in England
, 25, 28

as exogenous shock
, 144–146

future accountability regimes
, 30–31

implementation
, 64

knowledge
, 90

knowledge and limitations of modelling analyses
, 72, 89

and local accountability arrangements
, 21–22

local transport governance in England
, 22–25

participant selection and interviews
, 24–25

policies need to be aligned
, 69–70

as policy instrument(s) for endogenous change
, 146–149

prevalence
, 59

for taxation
, 68

transition
, 21, 59, 65, 68

uncertainty
, 28–30

Smart mobility providers
, 21–22, 24, 29–34, 210–211

Smart movement
, 131

Snowballing
, 39–40

Societal goals
, 175–176

Subsidies
, 157, 161, 163, 174

Substantive values
, 121

Supra-national regulation
, 59

Stockholm
, 125, 195

Sustainability
, 129

Sustainability goals
, 39

Sustainability transition
, 12, 218

Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
, 3, 38

Sustainable mobility
, 4–5, 10, 20, 126, 128

Sustainable society
, 12, 218, 220

Sweden
, 40, 48, 120–131, 155, 187–191, 206

Swedish Transport Administration
, 43, 43n2, 48

Symbolic
, 131, 156, 210

System Dynamics and Causal Loop Diagram
, 11, 38

System dynamics
, 38, 40

Target group
, 5, 8–10, 206–207, 209, 217–218

Taxes and fees
, 157

Testbed(s)
, 123–125, 210–211

Testing in real life situations
, 130

Tomelilla innovation week
, 127

Traffic congestion
, 128

Transparency
, 11, 121, 128–130, 132

Transport (see also Urban transport systems)
, 58

demand
, 93–94

demand models
, 94

freight
, 42

functions
, 23

passenger
, 41–42

policy objectives
, 157

system
, 158–159

taxation
, 67–69

transport planning project, typical organisation of
, 77

Transport governance, England
, 22–24

Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM)
, 24, 28, 30, 32

Transport for London (TfL)
, 149

Transport for West Midlands (TfWM)
, 24, 28, 30

Treasure
, 142, 155, 157–158

Trip purpose
, 91–92

Trust
, 42, 48, 181, 206–207

Uncertainty
, 28–30

Ungovernability
, 154

Unilateral state communication
, 162, 162

Urban Living Labs (ULLs)
, 124

Urban transport systems (see also Public transport in rural areas)
, 106–107

market forces
, 115–116

platform technologies
, 114–115

private sector perspectives
, 109–114

public sector perspectives
, 108–109

research approach
, 108

User groups
, 41, 48, 70

User-centred design
, 197–198

Value of Travel Time (VTT)
, 41, 47, 49–50, 91

Vehicle-kilometre travelled (VKT)
, 39, 41, 50, 205

Vehicles and drivers
, 157

Viable Cities
, 127

Volunteer-based transport
, 192

Vinnova
, 123

West Midlands Combined Authority
, 24

West Midlands
, 32

West Yorkshire Combined Authority (WYCA)
, 24

‘Wicked’ problems in policy documents
, 122–123, 128

Window of opportunity
, 2, 33, 182, 205

Yellow vests
, 188, 192, 206

Zuboff
, 203, 208, 215