Children’s everyday mobility and freedom of movement have been closely linked to parental practices, or what has been referred to as parental ‘mobility permits’ or ‘mobility licences’. Most research tends to focus on parental restrictions, while this article explores the affective practices Swedish middle-class parents use in order to enhance their children’s mobility, i.e. how emotions are perceived as enabling parents’ and children’s spatial experiences and thus their feelings of safety and security; as well as how emotions are talked of as disabling or disrupting the potential for children’s mobility. These affective practices are analysed in relation to the parents’ self-reflexive positioning on a continuum between “the helicopter paren...
In 2012 the average daily transportation distance for every Dane were 40 km (TU Data). Realising how...
Based upon a qualitative PhD study of 11 families everyday mobility, this paper inquiries into the e...
Autonomy – acting volitionally with a sense of choice – is a crucial right for children. Given paren...
Children’s everyday mobility and freedom of movement have been closely linked to parental practices,...
A sustainable development of the built environment asks for changes in urban residents’ mobility pat...
Dominant discourses of childhood and mobility lead to the social, spatial and temporal placing of ch...
Mobility is important in shaping people’s lives and experiences through places visited and social in...
International audienceDuring the last decades, social sciences and environmental psychology studies ...
Children's perspectives are practically absent in new mobility studies. In this article, I wish to d...
In recent decades, there has been a decline in active school transportation (AST). Parents play an i...
The global decline of children's independent mobility is well documented. Whilst the Nordic countrie...
International audienceFacing challenges of climate change, children’s mobility is an important issue...
Background/aim: A vast majority of the journeys made by children with disabilities in Sweden are in ...
There is a norm assuming high mobility in the Western world today, which can increase the social and...
This article focuses on the everyday mobilities of families living in a disadvantaged neighbourhood ...
In 2012 the average daily transportation distance for every Dane were 40 km (TU Data). Realising how...
Based upon a qualitative PhD study of 11 families everyday mobility, this paper inquiries into the e...
Autonomy – acting volitionally with a sense of choice – is a crucial right for children. Given paren...
Children’s everyday mobility and freedom of movement have been closely linked to parental practices,...
A sustainable development of the built environment asks for changes in urban residents’ mobility pat...
Dominant discourses of childhood and mobility lead to the social, spatial and temporal placing of ch...
Mobility is important in shaping people’s lives and experiences through places visited and social in...
International audienceDuring the last decades, social sciences and environmental psychology studies ...
Children's perspectives are practically absent in new mobility studies. In this article, I wish to d...
In recent decades, there has been a decline in active school transportation (AST). Parents play an i...
The global decline of children's independent mobility is well documented. Whilst the Nordic countrie...
International audienceFacing challenges of climate change, children’s mobility is an important issue...
Background/aim: A vast majority of the journeys made by children with disabilities in Sweden are in ...
There is a norm assuming high mobility in the Western world today, which can increase the social and...
This article focuses on the everyday mobilities of families living in a disadvantaged neighbourhood ...
In 2012 the average daily transportation distance for every Dane were 40 km (TU Data). Realising how...
Based upon a qualitative PhD study of 11 families everyday mobility, this paper inquiries into the e...
Autonomy – acting volitionally with a sense of choice – is a crucial right for children. Given paren...