ABSTRACT

Rural Accessibility in European Regions explores concepts, methodologies, and case studies dealing with accessibility in European rural areas, embracing cultural, socioeconomic, and governance aspects that play a key role for accessibility policies in rural and peripheral areas.

In the first part, the chapters introduce rural accessibility challenges, present a methodology to support policymaking for enhancing accessibility in rural areas and apply it to case studies in the United Kingdom, Italy, Spain, and Sweden. In the second part, additional cases from Poland, Germany, Greece, and France provide alternative approaches to the topic, and a research agenda is proposed. Overall, the book contributes to a conceptualisation of rural accessibility, addressing challenges and potentials for rural accessibility and urban–rural relationships in European regions.

The book fills a gap in the existing bodies of literature on accessibility and on rural planning, bridging the two spheres with an interdisciplinary approach to rural accessibility for mobility, planning, and regional studies.

chapter 1|20 pages

Rural Accessibility in European Regions

Exploring Uncharted Territory

part I|95 pages

Urban–Rural Connectivity

chapter 4|18 pages

Accessibility and Urban–Rural Connectivity in Marina Alta, Spain

Raising Awareness, Identifying Key Policies

chapter 5|22 pages

Accessibility and Social Exclusion in Peripheral Territories

The Case of Scarborough, United Kingdom

part II|100 pages

Taking Up the Challenge

chapter 9|21 pages

Production Modes, Urban–Rural Relations, and Rural Transport

North Pelion vis-à-vis Volos, Greece

chapter 10|21 pages

“Bottom-Up” Mobility Services

Experiences with Community Transport in Germany

chapter 11|18 pages

Bridging Tactics and Strategies for Mobility in Mountain Areas

The Example of Briançon, France

chapter 12|18 pages

Learning from Experience

Towards a Research Agenda on Rural Accessibility