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Uncommon Commons: Civic Participation and the Localised Maintenance of Road Infrastructure in Sweden

Jens Alm (The Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute, Sweden)
Alexander Paulsson (Lund University School of Economics and Management, Department of Business Administration, Sweden)

Public Participation in Transport in Times of Change

ISBN: 978-1-80455-038-0, eISBN: 978-1-80455-037-3

Publication date: 3 May 2023

Abstract

Transport infrastructure in most countries is owned and maintained either by public authorities, private organisations, or individuals. However, in Sweden, about 50 per cent of the road network is owned and maintained by civic road associations. By using the analytic notion of commoning, this chapter seeks to explore how road maintenance is organised and in what ways civic participation is contributing to infrastructure maintenance. Through interviews with representatives of civic road associations in Vellinge municipality and municipal representatives, we conclude that property owners are being commoned, that is, they are obliged to be a member of the civic road association in the neighbourhood where they own property. This means that property owners are given the opportunity to collectively decide on matters of road infrastructure, including maintenance and investments. Each civic road association is also acting as an organisational collective, demanding or pressuring the municipality and its politicians to reform subsidies and the organisation of ownership of roads and responsibility for their maintenance. As a single property owner, this is difficult, but as an organisational collective, in a civic road association, they have a voice. As a citizen, local municipal election offers opportunities to push for change, but at these institutionalised moments of democracy, road infrastructure issues compete with other issues. Election campaigns rarely target road maintenance, although Vellinge seems to be an exception here. Nevertheless, as citizenship is built around the provision of universal and evenly distributed infrastructure, crumbling infrastructure in different parts of the municipality tends to raise concerns over equal access and opportunities – and also differentiated citizenships.

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Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements

This research was funded by the research program Mistra InfraMaint. We would like to thank the interviewees in Vellinge for taking the time to talk to us, and the editors and reviewers for fruitful comments.

Citation

Alm, J. and Paulsson, A. (2023), "Uncommon Commons: Civic Participation and the Localised Maintenance of Road Infrastructure in Sweden", Hansson, L., Sørensen, C.H. and Rye, T. (Ed.) Public Participation in Transport in Times of Change (Transport and Sustainability, Vol. 18), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 97-114. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2044-994120230000018008

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023 Jens Alm and Alexander Paulsson