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Care moves people: complex systems and futures signals supporting production and reflection of individual mobile utopias

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  • Nicolas A. Balcom Raleigh
  • Anna Kirveennummi
  • Sari Puustinen

Abstract

Futures of mobility are a pressing concern for cities addressing sustainability and climate change challenges. As cities renew their mobility systems and launch efforts to meet these targets, new sensitive qualitative methodologies are needed. This article discusses a focused mobility diary experiment that was conducted in May 2017 in Turku, Finland and its subarea, with a small set of participants. The goal of this study was to gain insights into potential developments in the city’s mobility systems and practices. This article utilises a multidisciplinary complex systems approach describing how we used the concepts of futures signals and mobile utopias as tools when analysing some prefigurative patterns in individual mobility practices. A key outcome of this methodological experimentation was the interconnections made between two research traditions and a notion of the various ways care underlies, effects, and contours the mobility practices of people–in other words, people are moved by care. This article demonstrates how with the concepts of futures signals, and mobilised utopias, we can reach the important aspirational and prefigurative practices and motivations of people, which permit us to interpret potential futures in particular urban settings characterised by daily life activities.

Suggested Citation

  • Nicolas A. Balcom Raleigh & Anna Kirveennummi & Sari Puustinen, 2020. "Care moves people: complex systems and futures signals supporting production and reflection of individual mobile utopias," Mobilities, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 15(1), pages 54-68, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:rmobxx:v:15:y:2020:i:1:p:54-68
    DOI: 10.1080/17450101.2019.1667125
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