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Bicycle Politics

Symposium and workshop

Thursday 16th – Friday 17th September 2010

Centre for Mobilities Research, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK

The major role and relevance of bicycles and cycling to future life seems increasingly unquestionable. On the ground, projects across the world are committed to promoting cycling and/or cycling-oriented subcultures. In
both theory and practice, there’s a real energy and vitality to think about cycling differently, to carve out alternative possibilities around the bicycle.

But if cycling is enjoying a renaissance, it is also under fire. Whilst almost everywhere people are pushing for cycling, it also seems that almost everywhere cycling is deeply problematic – contentious, oppressed,
discriminated against.

Bicycles, cycling and cyclists seem to invoke love and hate in equal measure …

Bicycle Politics, a two day event hosted by the Centre for Mobilities Research (CeMoRe) at Lancaster University, UK, aims to explore bicycles and cycling politically. By thinking creatively and critically, its
political project is to help push bicycles and cycling further into the hearts of our cities and societies, to improve the possibilities for cycling to re-make our world, to assist cycling’s obvious potential to
contribute to alternative, sustainable mobility futures.

To this end, we are calling for critical explorations of the political, social, cultural and economic barriers to current and future cycling, as well as for critical investigations of the ways in which bicycles, cycling
and cyclists are currently framed.

We welcome all proposals for papers which contributions fit under the broad heading of Bicycle Politics. Such contributions might examine:

Cycling and political economies and ideologies
The politics of cycling ‘promotion’
Critiques of cycling
Cycling and discriminations
Cycling and inequalities
Cycling, social control, freedom and deviance
Cycling, space and the politics of space
Cycling, social movements and social change
Cycling and identity
Cycling and the politics of representation
Feminist perspectives on cycling
Cycling and the law

The precise structure of the event will be decided later. But we anticipate the first day comprising paper presentations, with the second day given over to deeper explorations of the papers and ideas presented
the previous day. Our intention is for an edited collection, Bicycle Politics, to emerge out of the event.

If you wish to present a paper, please send title and abstract, by Wednesday 5th May 2010, to both:

Dave Horton – d.r.horton@lancaster.ac.uk and Aurora Trujillo – a.trujilloperaire@reading.ac.uk

We aim for the symposium and workshop to be free and open to all. However, spaces could be limited. So if you would like to participate, but do not plan to present a paper, please email us to reserve a place.

Hozzászólás-megjelenítési lehetőségek

A választott hozzászólás-megjelenítési mód a „Beállítások mentése” gombbal rögzíthető.
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Zsabor képe

hát május 5.-ig megírni

hát május 5.-ig megírni egy korrekt cikket azért elég necces.

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pixel képe

Május 5-ig a címét és az

Május 5-ig a címét és az absztraktot kell megírni...

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www.every7years.net

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Zsabor képe

Ja. Akkor oké :) Kár hogy

Ja. Akkor oké :) Kár hogy nem vagyok szociológus, pedig érdekel a téma.

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