Dealing with Dilemma’s: How Can Experiments Contribute to a More Sustainable Mobility System?

Sustainable mobility has proved to be a perennial challenge to realize. Scholars have argued that experiments could point the way forward towards sustainable mobility (cf. Loorbach, 2007, Markard and Truffer, 2008). In doing so, literature attributes a vital but complex task to those who engage in e...

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Main Authors: Mark de Bruijne, Odette van de Riet, Alexander de Haan, Joop Koppenjan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: TU Delft Open 2010-09-01
Series:European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
Online Access:https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/2892
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spelling doaj-07cf15c490ae4eee967b682b6b1bc91a2021-07-26T08:43:24ZengTU Delft OpenEuropean Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research1567-71412010-09-0110310.18757/ejtir.2010.10.3.28922513Dealing with Dilemma’s: How Can Experiments Contribute to a More Sustainable Mobility System?Mark de Bruijne0Odette van de Riet1Alexander de Haan2Joop Koppenjan3Delft University of TechnologyNetherlands Institute for Transport Policy AnalysisDelft University of TechnologyErasmus UniversitySustainable mobility has proved to be a perennial challenge to realize. Scholars have argued that experiments could point the way forward towards sustainable mobility (cf. Loorbach, 2007, Markard and Truffer, 2008). In doing so, literature attributes a vital but complex task to those who engage in experiments. However, an important knowledge gap pertains to whether and how experiments contribute to learning about transitions and in what way they should be managed to break-up the more or less inertial mobility governance system. This paper aims to analyze how state-of-the-art literature on the governance of multi-actor systems considers experiments to contribute to transitions and highlight key dilemma’s that professionals engaged in the management of experimental face in the day-to-day management and decision making processes during the experiment. The paper will highlight these dilemmas and choices and illustrate their importance for experiments in the field of transportation and more specifically in the specific context of the Dutch mobility system and the TRANSUMO research program. Identifying these dilemma’s benefits practitioners who are engaged in the management of experiments to more consciously reflect on and include issues of second-order learning in the day-to-day management and decision making during the experiment to reach a more sustainable mobile system.https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/2892
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark de Bruijne
Odette van de Riet
Alexander de Haan
Joop Koppenjan
spellingShingle Mark de Bruijne
Odette van de Riet
Alexander de Haan
Joop Koppenjan
Dealing with Dilemma’s: How Can Experiments Contribute to a More Sustainable Mobility System?
European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
author_facet Mark de Bruijne
Odette van de Riet
Alexander de Haan
Joop Koppenjan
author_sort Mark de Bruijne
title Dealing with Dilemma’s: How Can Experiments Contribute to a More Sustainable Mobility System?
title_short Dealing with Dilemma’s: How Can Experiments Contribute to a More Sustainable Mobility System?
title_full Dealing with Dilemma’s: How Can Experiments Contribute to a More Sustainable Mobility System?
title_fullStr Dealing with Dilemma’s: How Can Experiments Contribute to a More Sustainable Mobility System?
title_full_unstemmed Dealing with Dilemma’s: How Can Experiments Contribute to a More Sustainable Mobility System?
title_sort dealing with dilemma’s: how can experiments contribute to a more sustainable mobility system?
publisher TU Delft Open
series European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
issn 1567-7141
publishDate 2010-09-01
description Sustainable mobility has proved to be a perennial challenge to realize. Scholars have argued that experiments could point the way forward towards sustainable mobility (cf. Loorbach, 2007, Markard and Truffer, 2008). In doing so, literature attributes a vital but complex task to those who engage in experiments. However, an important knowledge gap pertains to whether and how experiments contribute to learning about transitions and in what way they should be managed to break-up the more or less inertial mobility governance system. This paper aims to analyze how state-of-the-art literature on the governance of multi-actor systems considers experiments to contribute to transitions and highlight key dilemma’s that professionals engaged in the management of experimental face in the day-to-day management and decision making processes during the experiment. The paper will highlight these dilemmas and choices and illustrate their importance for experiments in the field of transportation and more specifically in the specific context of the Dutch mobility system and the TRANSUMO research program. Identifying these dilemma’s benefits practitioners who are engaged in the management of experiments to more consciously reflect on and include issues of second-order learning in the day-to-day management and decision making during the experiment to reach a more sustainable mobile system.
url https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/2892
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