ABSTRACT

Technological and social developments are not mutually exclusive forces. Mobility, one of these forces, exists in a perpetual state of symbiosis between technology and society. Although this concept can be found in various disciplines, including civil engineering, transport planning, geography and social and development theory, mobility still remains marginalized in its visualization as a convergent and divergent resource and a product that crosscuts these disciplines. Th is calls for a more coherent and comprehensive conceptualization of the idea. Th e following essay analyses mobility in the context of transport planning but ventures beyond its restrictive borders and attempts to extend the discourse surrounding this theme. As Peter Jones (1987: 45) notes, the proposition that travel-related mobility problems need to be studied in the broader context parallels a similar concern voiced in many other subject areas on the need to broaden the context in which topics are examined. Fritjof Capra (1982) outlines similar developments in the fi elds of physics, medicine and economics, as researchers in these areas also get to grips with the notion of society and life as much more interconnected phenomena than was appreciated within the Newtonian-Cartesian mode of thought (as quoted in Jones 1987: 45).