I've just found this email - in an earlier piece of research I came to
the conclusion that "mobility" was a right for all, but "public
transport" was not. Still we all drive a car, don't we!
---
Roy Killey, MLS ALA Cert Ed
(formerly Academic Liaison Librarian, Design and Communication Systems,
Anglia Polytechnic University; now MPhil/PhD student researching into
the psychology of transport imagery)
28 Howe Lane,
Nafferton,
Driffield,
East Yorkshire,
YO25 4JU
01377 254718
----------
>From: [log in to unmask]
>To: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask]
>Cc: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: Re: Sustainable mobility versus sustainable accessibility
>Date: Sat, Apr 1, 2000, 9:37
>
> Take care to ensure that mobility is not confused with travel - rather like
> movement can be confused with action, although even sustainable mobility
> could be verging on an oxymoron if it included acting in that sense rather
> than having the mobility available.....
>
> Dave H
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|