Cars and behaviour: Psychological barriers to car restraint and sustainable urban transport

被引:0
|
作者
Diekstra, R
Kroon, M
机构
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
This article analyses the phenomenon of the motor car and driving behaviour in terms of current psychological theories, particularly the motivation theory of Henry A Murray (1938) and the acceptability/availability model of behaviour as described by Rose (1990). These theories contain a set of concepts for the analysis of car ownership, car use and driving behaviour and for the development of intervention strategies to influence these. Psychological and social/contextual aspects of human behaviour are partly the product of previous developments in the meanings, functions and appraisal of that behaviour. Behavioural analysis of car use and driving therefore is not complete without an initial examination of the phenomenon of the motor car in a historical and social-cultural perspective and of the extent to which historically defined meanings and motives determine the current car culture and driving behaviour, such as done by Sachs (1984). This will be followed by a detailed analysis of the most significant motivational functions of the car. In as much as the car is a technique par excellence of satisfying basic human motives and needs, current car ownership, use and driving habits can largely be explained in terms of the acceptability/availability hypothesis (Rose, 1990), on the basis of which recommendations for reduction and control can then be made. In the context of democratic market-based economies the extent to which reduction and control of car ownership and use can be achieved, however, is modest at the most. For the car-industrial-cultural complex is both an economical and psychological force of enormous magnitude as well as an expression of contemporary types of personality.
引用
收藏
页码:55 / 62
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Sustainable transport and the modernisation of urban transport in Delhi and Stockholm
    Thynell, Marie
    Mohan, Dinesh
    Tiwari, Geetam
    [J]. CITIES, 2010, 27 (06) : 421 - 429
  • [42] The definition and connotation of the sustainable urban transport
    Zhang, Liang
    Wei, Yan-yan
    [J]. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE, PTS 1-3, 2013, 253-255 : 254 - 262
  • [43] Evaluation of Sustainable Urban Transport in China
    Fang, Jing
    [J]. ADVANCES IN CIVIL ENGINEERING, PTS 1-6, 2011, 255-260 : 4056 - 4060
  • [44] The Strategy of Sustainable Development of Urban Transport
    Spirin, I., V
    Matantseva, O. Yu
    Grishaeva, Yu M.
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE - FAR EAST CON (ISCFEC 2020), 2020, 128 : 2624 - 2628
  • [45] SUSTAINABLE URBAN TRANSPORT ON THREE WHEELS
    Hossein, Mohammed Elius
    [J]. ROMANIAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE, 2020, 9 (02): : 19 - 36
  • [46] Sustainable Urban Transport in an Asian Context
    Wang, Donggen
    [J]. JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT GEOGRAPHY, 2012, 24 : 539 - 540
  • [47] The specification of sustainable urban transport strategies
    May, A
    Shepherd, S
    Timms, P
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND WORLD ECOLOGY, 1999, 6 (04): : 293 - 304
  • [48] Urban Space Distribution and Sustainable Transport
    Gossling, Stefan
    Schroeder, Marcel
    Spaeth, Philipp
    Freytag, Tim
    [J]. TRANSPORT REVIEWS, 2016, 36 (05) : 659 - 679
  • [49] CONSUMER RESPONSE TO PUBLIC TRANSPORT IMPROVEMENTS AND CAR RESTRAINT - SOME PRACTICAL FINDINGS
    HEGGIE, IG
    [J]. POLICY AND POLITICS, 1977, 5 (04): : 47 - 69
  • [50] The potential impacts of automated cars on urban transport: An exploratory analysis
    May, Anthony D.
    Shepherd, Simon
    Pfaffenbichler, Paul
    Emberger, Guenter
    [J]. TRANSPORT POLICY, 2020, 98 : 127 - 138