TY - JOUR
T1 - Citizens with limited autonomy
T2 - The forgotten of mobility policies. Lima as an example
AU - Cabrera, Félix
AU - Cebollada, Àngel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Societe Belge de Geographie. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - New mobility policies focus on the right to a sustainable, equitable and accessible city. Thus, urban environments are gradually being transformed to become more inclusive, favouring journeys on foot, by bicycle and public transport, and achieving a wider ownership of public space, while limiting the use of private vehicles. However, no single model, with homogeneous capacities and needs, represents a human being; in fact, there is a large number of heterogeneities. Habitually, cities have been built for a single individual: male, middle-aged and with full physical and mental faculties. This article presents the results of a case study in the city of Lima, Peru. Research is based on interviews to understand the barriers that groups of citizens with limited autonomy (older adults, children, the motor disabled, the visually impaired and the cognitively disabled) face when they move around the city. The cyclical chain of requirements to travel is identified. The article concludes with a call for public mobility policies to integrate the biopsychosocial sphere to encourage autonomous journeys by the entire citizenry.
AB - New mobility policies focus on the right to a sustainable, equitable and accessible city. Thus, urban environments are gradually being transformed to become more inclusive, favouring journeys on foot, by bicycle and public transport, and achieving a wider ownership of public space, while limiting the use of private vehicles. However, no single model, with homogeneous capacities and needs, represents a human being; in fact, there is a large number of heterogeneities. Habitually, cities have been built for a single individual: male, middle-aged and with full physical and mental faculties. This article presents the results of a case study in the city of Lima, Peru. Research is based on interviews to understand the barriers that groups of citizens with limited autonomy (older adults, children, the motor disabled, the visually impaired and the cognitively disabled) face when they move around the city. The cyclical chain of requirements to travel is identified. The article concludes with a call for public mobility policies to integrate the biopsychosocial sphere to encourage autonomous journeys by the entire citizenry.
KW - Disability
KW - Lima
KW - Limited autonomy
KW - Mobility
KW - Peru
KW - Public policies
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85082667963&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4000/belgeo.36495
DO - 10.4000/belgeo.36495
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85082667963
SN - 1377-2368
JO - BELGEO
JF - BELGEO
IS - 4
ER -