Centre for Mobilities and Urban Studies 2.37

5 star(s) from 1 votes
Rendsburggade 14
Aalborg, 9000
Denmark

About Centre for Mobilities and Urban Studies

Centre for Mobilities and Urban Studies Centre for Mobilities and Urban Studies is a well known place listed as Education in Aalborg , University in Aalborg , Research Service in Aalborg ,

Contact Details & Working Hours

Details

The centre aims to contribute to mobility research at the highest international level. C-MUS contributes to the development of theories, concepts and analytical frameworks of mobility studies as well as working with empirical studies embracing disciplinary approaches from urban studies, ethnography, geography, sociology, consumer studies, media studies, discourse studies, urban design, urban planning and management, city politics, urban traffic planning and engineering, and tourism studies.

The concept of ‘mobilities’ focuses on the complex intersections between diverse forms of physical travel of people; physical movement of matter and objects; virtual travel on the Internet; digital movement of images, messages and information; and communicative travel via text messages, telephones, emails, etc. Mobilities are partly seen as constitutive for the structures that frame social life in society, and it is within these mobilities that cultural patterns, actions, and identities are produced and reproduced. But, at the same time, social structures of different kinds (e.g. economic, political and spatial) are seen as constitutive for the ways in which mobilities develop. The aim of C-MUS is therefore to investigate the social and cultural bases for mobilities, not only focusing on the actual mobility in itself, but also on the potential mobility (motility), and to explore how potential mobility is transformed into different mobilities.

In particular the research undertaken within C-MUS aims at exploring policies and planning approaches to contemporary mobility in urban areas and regions. Furthermore, C-MUS aims at understanding the implications of transformations in mobility patterns for the everyday life of citizens across the world, with particular emphasis on understanding the way infrastructures work together (or against) physical mobility, with repercussions for cultural consumption, social interaction, environmental sustainability and aesthetic quality. In other words, what makes the research done within C-MUS innovative and trans-disciplinary is its ambition to analyse the production (e.g. design, planning and management) and consumption (e.g. use, reworking and resistance) of mobilities within a unified framework.