Programme Cycling and Society Symposium 2016

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Day 1: Thursday, 29 September 9.15 Registration open

12.30 - 13.00 Lunch

9.45 - 10.15 - Welcome and Introduction by Dave Horton (founder Cycling and Society) and Monika Büscher (director Cemore)

13.00 - 13.30 Keynote presentation: Frauke Behrendt (University of Brighton, UK)

10.15 - 12.30 Sessions 1: Cycling and Everyday Life in the City; Chair: Cosmin Popan (Lancaster University, UK) 10.15 - 10.30 Liv Jorun Andenes (Agency for Bicycling in the City of Oslo, Norway): ‘Making Oslo a bicycle friendly city – Ambitions, efforts and results’

Venue: Ellel Village Hall. Main Road, Galgate, Lancaster LA2 0LQ Web: www.cyclingandsociety.org Twitter hashtag: #C8S2016

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13.30 - 15.00 Session 2: Emerging Innovations for Cycling Futures; Chair: Dennis Zuev (CIES-ISCTE, Lisbon, Portugal) 13.30 - 13.45 Oskar Funk (Copenhagen Municipality, Denmark): ‘The potential for e-bikes in everyday life cycling practices’

10.30 - 10.45 Esther Anaya (Imperial College London, UK): ‘A framework to study the impact of the built environment in cycling behaviour’

13.45 - 14.00 Robert Bradshaw (Maynooth University, Republic of Ireland): ‘Technical Citizenry and the Realisation of Bike Share Design Possibilities’

10.45 - 11.00 Jamie O’Hare and Rorie Parsons (Newcastle University, UK): ‘Shaping inclusive cycling practices using Anglo-Dutch perspectives: we are (not) so different from each other’

14.00 - 14.15 Shaun Williams (Cardiff University, Wales): ‘“Pleased to announce you’ll never cycle here”: Imagining the ‘(bi)cyclist’ in urban design orthodoxies and cycling infrastructure’

11.00 - 11.15 Maximilian Hoor (Humboldt University Berlin, Germany): ‘The Bicycle as a Symbol of Lifestyle and Status? Towards the Cultural Meaning of Urban Cycling’

14.15 - 14.30 Robin Lovelace (Leeds University, UK): ‘Tools of the trade: adapting 20th Century transport models for 21st Century challenges’

11.15 - 11.30 Jonathan Shapiro Anjaria (Brandeis University, USA): ‘Cycle Love: Rethinking persons and objects in India’s new cycling cultures’

With kind support from:

Day 1: Thursday, 29 September

11.30 - 11.45 Nicholas A. Scott (Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada): ‘Wilderness Futures: Cycling, Nature and the City’

11.45 - 12.00 Lance Barrie (University of Wollongong, Australia): ‘“It was freezing cold, it was dark and I’m like, great I really enjoy this!”: understanding endurance cycling mobility practices’

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14.30 - 14.45 Toby Smith (UC Davis, USA): ‘Mapping the Cycling Body: Urban ontologies, locative knowledge, and digital drift in the Age of Strava’

15.00 - 15.15 Coffee

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Day 1: Thursday, 29 September 15.15 - 17.00 Session 3: Cycling Inequalities; Chair: Katerina Psarikidou (Lancaster University, UK) 15.15 - 15.30 Martin Emanuel (Uppsala University, Sweden): ‘From Victim to Villain: Cycling, Mobility Policy, and Spatial Conflicts in Stockholm, ca 1980’ 15.30 - 15.45 Anne Jensen (Aarhus University, Denmark): ‘Cycling, sustainability and the power of mobility cultures’ 15.45 - 16.00 Angela van der Kloof (Mobycon, Delft, The Netherlands): ‘‘Cycling for everyone’ in the Netherlands’ 16.00 - 16.15 Amy Lubitow (Portland State University, USA): ‘Barriers to Routine Cycling for Women and Minorities in Portland, Oregon’ 16.15 - 16.30 Marina Kohler Harkot (FAUUSP, São Paulo, Brazil): ‘Why don’t women cycle in São Paulo? An analysis on the low rates of women commuting cycling in São Paulo, Brazil’ 16.30 - 16.45 Kevin Hickman (Inclusive Cycling Forum, UK): ‘Lost in translation - is cycling’s lingua franca ignoring disabled people?’

17.05 - 17.45 Poster Presentations (I) on Cycling Innovations by: Gunter Tobias Barne Hofmeister; Connor Walsh & Hamish Thomas 17.45 - 18.15 Dinner

18.15 - 20.00 Film screening: ‘La Course en tête’ (Joël Santoni, 1974). Foreword by Bruce Bennett (Lancaster University, UK)

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Day 2: Friday, 30 September 8.30 - 9. 30 Cycling and Society Research Group Annual Meeting 9.15 Coffee

9.30 - 10.00 Keynote presentation: Peter Cox (University of Chester, UK)

10.00 - 11.45 Session 4: Cycling Governance (I); Chair: Nick Brelsford (Sustrans)

Day 2: Friday, 30 September 13.15 - 15.00 Session 5: Cycling Governance (II); Chair: Dave Horton (founder Cycling and Society) 13.15 - 13.30 Alistair Sheldrick and Gabriele Schliwa (The University of Manchester, UK): ‘Policy Learning and Sustainable Urban Transitions: Mobilising Berlin’s Cycling Renaissance’

13.30 - 13.45 Dag Balkmar (Örebro University, Sweden): ‘Bicycling and politics: movements, strategies and visions in bicycle activism in Sweden’

10.00 - 10.15 Fanny Paschek (University of Greenwich, UK): ‘The governance of cycling in London’

13.45 - 14.00 JP Amaral (Bike Anjo, São Paulo, Brazil): ‘Brazilian society and Municipalities together for the inclusion of bicycles in urban mobility plans’

10.15 - 10.30 Hugh Mackay, Hillary Reed and Tom Wells (Open University, UK; Cycling UK RTR Portsmouth; New Image Bicycles): ‘Cycling governance: the structure of cycling organisations and their effectiveness in shaping policy’

14.00 - 14.15 Chelsea Tschoerner (NürtingenGeislingen University of Applied Sciences, Germany): ‘From transport planning to policy for mobility: Cycling policy in Munich as an example of new forms of governance for everyday mobilities’

10.30 - 10.45 Gabriele Schliwa (The University of Manchester, UK): ‘What the hack!? Exploring civic hackathons for participatory urban governance – The case of cycling’

14.15 - 14.30 Chihyung Jeon (Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea): ‘Dams and Bikes: The Four Rivers Bikeway and the Contested Mobilities in South Korea’

10.45 - 11.00 Sally Watson (Newcastle University, UK): ‘Probing elusive power structures within a city’s cycling politics’

14.30 - 14.45 Fariya Sharmeen (Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands): ‘Cycling Innovations towards Urban Transitions in Energy, Policy and New Modalities’

11.00 - 11.15 Alan Munro (consultant researcher, UK): ‘Everybody wants to change the world: Reimagining future notions of ‘activism’ in cycling’ 11.15 - 11.30 Neil Andrews and Isabelle Clement (Wheels for Wellbeing, UK): ‘Beyond the bicycle: towards a true cycling revolution’

11.50 - 12.30 Poster Presentations (II) on Everyday Cycling by: Jamie O’Hare; Bernhard Wieser; Graeme Sherriff & Stella Shackel 12.30 - 13.15 Lunch

15.00 - 15.15 Coffee

15.15 - 16.45 Round table Discussions and Reflections: The Future(s) of Cycling and of Cycling Research

16.45 - 17.00 Closing remarks 18.00 Critical Mass in Lancaster or Round Table on Children and Adult Cycling Education (plus film projection: ‘Mama Agatha’ by Fadi Hindash, 2015)


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