From pilot to policy: Examining the transition towards institutionalized practices in freight curbside management

IF 6.3 2区 工程技术 Q1 ECONOMICS
Laura Palacios-Argüello , Juan Pablo Castrellon , Ivan Sanchez-Diaz
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Streets are contested urban public spaces due to their limited availability. While they serve various functions, the needs of certain uses—such as freight—often have been overlooked in space allocation policies affecting urban livability. Recently, freight curbside management has emerged to address these conflicts, allowing service and delivery vehicles to better use street space, contributing to cities’ sustainability targets. Although pilots testing freight curbside interventions are a first step for policymakers to evaluate the effectiveness of these interventions, the transition from pilot to established practices remains underexplored. Therefore, the aim of this research is to understand the success and failure factors that influence the institutionalization process of interventions tested in freight curbside pilots. To achieve this, this paper analyses cases from various cities worldwide that have implemented such pilots, using the lens of institutional theory. Case selection criteria were based on the maturity level of freight curbside pilots. Specifically, the paper focused on those cases that had already implemented pilots, undergone monitoring, evaluation, and possible continuation processes. Data collection and analysis revealed coercive, normative, and mimetic forces driving change towards institutionalized practices. The data analysis identified 23 themes across four content domains, i.e., organizational, economic, technological, and regulatory. Successful institutionalization process relies on strategically selecting high demand loading zones and demonstrating public benefits. Enhancing user experience is also crucial. However, some interventions fail to become institutionalized due to regulatory constraints, business model issues, and land use regulations. This highlights the need for flexible, context-specific approaches. The analysis of institutional pressures revealed that coercive pressures influence transitions from themes related to the legal mandate of public agencies, pilot scope definition, and user experience, while normative pressures shape transition regarding public benefit, business models, stakeholder involvement, and data management themes. Mimetic forces guided early-stage pilots through lessons learned from cities with prior experience in curbside pilots. The findings provide recommendations and guidelines for the development of future pilots, useful for planners aiming at generating long-term curbside policies that solve freight-related street space conflicts.
从试点到政策:考察货运路边管理向制度化实践的过渡
由于可用性有限,街道是有争议的城市公共空间。虽然它们具有各种功能,但在影响城市宜居性的空间分配政策中,某些用途(如货运)的需求往往被忽视。最近,货运路边管理的出现解决了这些冲突,允许服务和运输车辆更好地利用街道空间,为城市的可持续发展目标做出贡献。尽管对货运路边干预措施进行试点测试是政策制定者评估这些干预措施有效性的第一步,但从试点向既定做法的过渡仍未得到充分探索。因此,本研究的目的是了解影响在货运路边飞行员中测试的干预制度化过程的成功和失败因素。为了实现这一目标,本文运用制度理论的视角,分析了世界各地实施这种试点的城市的案例。案例选择标准基于货运路边飞行员的成熟程度。具体来说,本文关注的是那些已经实施了试点、经历了监测、评估和可能的延续过程的案例。数据收集和分析揭示了强制性、规范性和模仿性的力量推动着向制度化实践的转变。数据分析确定了四个内容领域的23个主题,即组织、经济、技术和监管。成功的制度化过程依赖于战略性地选择高需求装载区并展示公共利益。增强用户体验也很重要。然而,由于监管限制、商业模式问题和土地使用法规等原因,一些干预措施未能制度化。这突出表明需要灵活的、特定于上下文的方法。对制度压力的分析表明,强制性压力影响与公共机构的法律授权、试点范围定义和用户体验相关主题的转变,而规范性压力影响公共利益、商业模式、利益相关者参与和数据管理主题的转变。模仿力量引导着早期的飞行员,从有路边飞行员经验的城市中吸取教训。研究结果为未来试点的发展提供了建议和指导方针,对旨在制定解决与货运有关的街道空间冲突的长期路边政策的规划者很有用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Transport Policy
Transport Policy Multiple-
CiteScore
12.10
自引率
10.30%
发文量
282
期刊介绍: Transport Policy is an international journal aimed at bridging the gap between theory and practice in transport. Its subject areas reflect the concerns of policymakers in government, industry, voluntary organisations and the public at large, providing independent, original and rigorous analysis to understand how policy decisions have been taken, monitor their effects, and suggest how they may be improved. The journal treats the transport sector comprehensively, and in the context of other sectors including energy, housing, industry and planning. All modes are covered: land, sea and air; road and rail; public and private; motorised and non-motorised; passenger and freight.
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