利用在线定性方法收集当地对新冠肺炎疫情后飞行未来的看法

IF 0.8 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Ed Atkins, Lycia Harper, Jessica Paddock, Martin Parker, C. Preist
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引用次数: 0

摘要

航空业代表了当代环境政治和政策的一个重要领域。Covid-19大流行导致国际旅行大幅放缓,并威胁到航空和航空部门的地位,这使得这一局面变得更加复杂。这种下降的时间性尚不清楚。在这篇文章中,我们提出了一项在线定性研究,探讨了在Covid-19以及由此产生的社会限制和对气候崩溃的认识之后,人们如何看待他们的飞行习惯在未来可能发生的变化。为此,我们将英国布里斯托尔作为我们分析的重点。布里斯托尔是一个以强烈的绿色政治和围绕机场扩建和航空业在零净未来中的作用的辩论为特色的城市。这项工作采用了完全在线进行的研究设计,包括通过当地媒体和在线焦点小组传播的调查。这项研究的结果表明,在疫情后的未来,近60%的受访者可能会减少飞行次数。此外,2019冠状病毒病大流行引发了对飞行的“重新想象”,对行为、政策和司法产生了重要影响。我们提出这项工作的目的有两个:首先,阐明covid后飞行行为变化的紧急模式,其次,批判性地反思在大流行期间进行在线定性研究的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Collecting Local Views on the Post-Covid Future of Flying Using Online Qualitative Methods
The aviation sector represents an important terrain for contemporary environmental politics and policy. This position has been complicated by the Covid-19 pandemic, which led to a dramatic slowdown in international travel and threatened the position of the aviation and airline sectors. The temporality of this decline remains unclear. In this article, we present online qualitative research that explores how people think their flying habits might change in the future—in the wake of both Covid-19 and resultant social restrictions and awareness of climate breakdown. To do so, we foreground our analysis in Bristol, United Kingdom—a city characterized by a strong brand of green politics and debates surrounding airport expansion and the role of aviation in a net-zero future. This work adopted a research design conducted entirely online, incorporating surveys disseminated via local media and online focus groups. Findings from this work demonstrate that close to 60% of those surveyed will likely fly less in a post-Covid future. Furthermore, the Covid-19 pandemic has prompted a “reimagination” of flying—with important behavioral, policy, and justice implications. Our objective in presenting this work is twofold—first to illuminate emergent patterns of behavioral change in flying post-Covid and, second, to critically reflect on conducting online qualitative research in a pandemic.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
12.50%
发文量
18
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