2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.tranpol.2017.06.006
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Coping with the costs of car dependency: A system of expedients used by low-income households on the outskirts of Dijon and Paris

Abstract: Low-income households in urban outskirts use expedients to cope with car dependency • Social networks, local resources, and reduced travel are the main expedients • Moving to less car-dependent locations is the expedient of last resort • Expedients are implemented by individuals but are collectively constructed AbstractLiving on low incomes and in a car-dependent area is often interpreted as a double burden for households, even if the two characteristics are often interdependent. While their capacity for mobil… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…These households are further financially vulnerable to oil price volatility (Sipe and Dodson, 2013;Dodson and Sipe, 2007;Mattioli et al, 2019;Leung et al, 2018). Low-income households use a variety of strategies to reduce transportation costs while maintaining their mobility: forgoing trips, carpooling, repairing cars themselves, cutting back on other spending to keep using cars, skipping insurance and other fees, and searching for deals on gas, insurance, and parking (Blumenberg et al, 2018;Blumenberg and Agrawal, 2014;Brobeck and Hunter, 2012;Belton Chevallier et al, 2018;Froud et al, 2005;Fletcher et al, 2010;Taylor et al, 2009).…”
Section: Car Ownership Among Low-income Householdsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These households are further financially vulnerable to oil price volatility (Sipe and Dodson, 2013;Dodson and Sipe, 2007;Mattioli et al, 2019;Leung et al, 2018). Low-income households use a variety of strategies to reduce transportation costs while maintaining their mobility: forgoing trips, carpooling, repairing cars themselves, cutting back on other spending to keep using cars, skipping insurance and other fees, and searching for deals on gas, insurance, and parking (Blumenberg et al, 2018;Blumenberg and Agrawal, 2014;Brobeck and Hunter, 2012;Belton Chevallier et al, 2018;Froud et al, 2005;Fletcher et al, 2010;Taylor et al, 2009).…”
Section: Car Ownership Among Low-income Householdsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Affordability in both the domestic and the transport sector is thus a critical issue, which has high political salience [68,69], as the issue of energy poverty is a key dimension of the broader energy justice paradigm [56]. Indeed, if low-income outer-suburban households are less car-deprived than urban ones, they are more likely to face another car-related transport disadvantage: car-related economic stress [70,71], defined as the "financial stress associated with owning and operating cars, and its negative consequences" [72].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Conversely, research on transport costs should give more consideration to household agency, in order to understand how economic stress arises throughout the life course. A few studies in this special issue provide empirical insights on this point, based on both quantitative (Curl et al, 2017) and qualitative (Belton-Chevallier et al, 2017;Ortar, 2017) methods.…”
Section: An Overview Of Contributionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The workshop was held at the Institute for Transport Studies at the University of Leeds (UK) on May 20-21 2015, and was attended by 41 academics, practitioners and policy-makers. Several of the academic presentations delivered at the workshop have evolved into articles included in this special issue 1 (Belton Chevallier, et al, 2017;Mattioli et al, 2017;Nicolas & Pelé, 2017;Scheiner, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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