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Articles

Public Storylines in the British Transition from Rail to Road Transport (1896–2000): Discursive Struggles in the Multi-Level Perspective

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Pages 513-542 | Published online: 08 Nov 2018
 

ABSTRACT

An analysis of the transition from railways to highways as the dominant British transport system during the twentieth century shows that public storylines about competing niche and regime technologies can have a powerful influence on socio-technical transitions. These storylines are developed by supporters and opponents of the competing technologies, with each group attempting to frame their favoured technology positively. The public salience of these storylines can be evaluated by assessing how highly they score on four elements of frame resonance: empirical fit, experiential commensurability, actor credibility, and macro-cultural resonance. These storylines can be seen at play across the entirety of the transition to a road-based transport system, from the very early history of the automobile through to the turn of the millennium, when public opposition to road transport was becoming increasingly pronounced. This case study uniquely traces discursive conflict over the entire course of a multi-decade transition. While existing literature in the multi-level perspective typically emphasises the disadvantages faced by niche-innovations, this case study shows that powerful storylines, enabled by the right cultural repertoires and possibly negative storylines about existing socio-technical systems, can create powerful political support for a new technology, giving it an advantage against more established incumbents.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes on contributors

Cameron Roberts is a researcher studying the history of Canadian bicycles at the Canada Science and Technology Museum in Ottawa. Previously he has worked as a socio-technical transitions researcher, studying the deliberate acceleration of socio-technical transitions at the University of Manchester, and studying the political economy of transport at the University of Leeds.

Frank W. Geels is Professor of System Innovation and Sustainability at the Alliance Manchester Business School at the University of Manchester. Geels is chairman of the international Sustainability Transitions Research Network (www.transitionsnetwork.org), and one of the world-leading scholars on socio-technical transitions and radical innovation. He has studied a dozen historical and contemporary transitions in mobility, agro-food and energy.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Darwin Trust of Edinburgh and Centre on Innovation & Energy Demand [grant number EP/K011790/1].

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