Medical Research Council Epidemiology Unit and UKCRC Centre for Diet and Activity Research, Box 296, Institute of Public Health, Forvie Site, Robinson Way, Cambridge, UK.
Soc Sci Med. 2012 Jul;75(1):233-9. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.01.038. Epub 2012 Mar 17.
Fostering physical activity is an established public health priority for the primary prevention of a variety of chronic diseases. One promising population approach is to seek to embed physical activity in everyday lives by promoting walking and cycling to and from work ('active commuting') as an alternative to driving. Predominantly quantitative epidemiological studies have investigated travel behaviours, their determinants and how they may be changed towards more active choices. This study aimed to depart from narrow behavioural approaches to travel and investigate the social context of commuting with qualitative social research methods. Within a social practice theory framework, we explored how people describe their commuting experiences and make commuting decisions, and how travel behaviour is embedded in and shaped by commuters' complex social worlds. Forty-nine semi-structured interviews and eighteen photo-elicitation interviews with accompanying field notes were conducted with a subset of the Commuting and Health in Cambridge study cohort, based in the UK. The findings are discussed in terms of three particularly pertinent facets of the commuting experience. Firstly, choice and decisions are shaped by the constantly changing and fluid nature of commuters' social worlds. Secondly, participants express ambiguities in relation to their reasoning, ambitions and identities as commuters. Finally, commuting needs to be understood as an embodied and emotional practice. With this in mind, we suggest that everyday decision-making in commuting requires the tactical negotiation of these complexities. This study can help to explain the limitations of more quantitative and static models and frameworks in predicting travel behaviour and identify future research directions.
促进身体活动是预防多种慢性病的既定公共卫生重点。一种有前途的人群方法是通过提倡步行和骑自行车上下班(“积极通勤”)作为驾驶的替代方式,将身体活动融入日常生活。主要的定量流行病学研究调查了出行行为、其决定因素以及如何朝着更积极的选择方向改变这些行为。本研究旨在摆脱对出行的狭隘行为方法,并通过定性社会研究方法调查通勤的社会背景。在社会实践理论框架内,我们探讨了人们如何描述他们的通勤经历和做出通勤决策,以及出行行为如何嵌入和塑造通勤者复杂的社会世界。在英国剑桥的通勤和健康研究队列中,我们对其中一部分人进行了 49 次半结构化访谈和 18 次照片引发访谈,并附有现场记录。这些发现从通勤体验的三个特别相关的方面进行了讨论。首先,选择和决策受到通勤者不断变化和流动的社会世界的影响。其次,参与者在他们作为通勤者的推理、野心和身份方面表达了模糊性。最后,通勤需要被理解为一种体现和情感的实践。考虑到这一点,我们认为日常通勤决策需要对这些复杂性进行策略性的协商。这项研究可以帮助解释更定量和静态的模型和框架在预测出行行为方面的局限性,并确定未来的研究方向。