4.5 Article

Framing the mobility transition: public communication of industry, science, media, and politics in Germany

Journal

ENERGY SUSTAINABILITY AND SOCIETY
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13705-022-00374-0

Keywords

Multi-Level Perspective (MLP); Framing; Verkehrswende; Mobilitatswende; Transport; Mobility; Germany

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL
  2. SLUB Dresden
  3. Boysen-TU Dresden-Research Training Group

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This paper investigates how incumbent actors in the field of transportation and mobility in Germany framed the issue of a transition in their public communication. It found that most actors view the transition as necessary and propose various solutions, primarily focusing on technical innovations and infrastructure expansion.
Background: Applying the Multi-Level Perspective (MLP) on socio-technical transitions, paired with the interdisciplinary framing approach, this paper investigates how incumbent actors of automobility in Germany framed the issue of a transition of mobility and transport ( Verkehrs/Mobilitatswende ) in their public communication in 2020. We first identified representatives of industry, science, policy, and media, since the Verkehrs/Mobilitatswende and its implementation measures are contested among these actors. Employing qualitative content analysis, we then screened 325 public documents according to the elements of the framing approach problem definition, causal interpretation, moral evaluation, and treatment recommendation. Results: Findings show that most of the actors frame a transformation of transport and mobility as a necessity. Their arguments encompass environmental and climate-related issues as well as infrastructural problems for bikes and public transport caused by the hegemony of automobility. The actors propose a variety of solutions, primarily focusing on technical innovations for cars or on the expansion of different infrastructures to achieve a modal shift towards sustainable mobility. Conclusion: This paper demonstrates that there is no common understanding of the problems and solutions to foster a mobility transition, as the diversity of problems and solutions proposed within the frame elements is high and complicates the prevailing implementation gap of the mobility transition. Therefore, MLP should be conceptually and methodologically bridged with the interdisciplinary framing approach, particularly with regard to the transition of mobility and transport.

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