Making Sense of Cycling activism
Peter Cox
Professor of Sociology
Department of Social and Political Science
University of Chester
peter.cox@chester.ac.uk
Abstract
Cycling activism has a long history and today, a global reach. However, the diverse forms of
participation used, the organisational (and non-organisational) structures employed, and the variety
of forms of engagement with political and extra political processes, appear to represent very different
understandings of citizenship and processes of political and social change envisaged by activists.
Through a meta-analysis of a wide variety of cycle activisms, this paper considers the actions and selfexpression of activists though their actions, writings and through the networks and organizations they
form, in order to understand how these express underlying assumptions (often not formally
articulated) that participants hold about the nature and mechanisms of change. It revisits Lofland’s
work on the American Peace Movement to consider the ways in which diverse activisms with a single
uniting feature can be understood as articulations of a range of interlocked and bundled models of
change. The paper thus explores the meanings attributed to forms of action by activists themselves
and questions simple typological, correlative relationships between organisations, forms, actions and
ideology.
The paper draws from ongoing extensive empirical study and a history of more 10 years of work with
these activist networks in Europe, South Asia, and North and South America. As part of this process of
analysis, it also considers the relationship between researcher, activism and activists.
Introduction
Cyclists and social activism have been connected for over one hundred and fifty years. Riders have
organised to protect and promote their own self-interest, to use cycling as a means to articulate other
social concerns or social change goals (such as suffrage or socialism), and in expression of broader
visions of social transformation of which cycling is an integral part. A number of recent studies of
specific groups and actions have explicitly used social movement studies approaches to explore cycle
activism (see for example Aldred, 2012; 2013; Balkmar & Soummerton 2017; Candipan, 2019;
1
Casteñeda, 2020; von Schneidemesser et al 2020; Tan and Martínez López, 2020). This paper
contributes to this analysis, but rather than focusing on a particular case, develops a meta-analysis of
cycle activism drawing both on published studies and original research. Its purpose is to establish a
framework that can allow us to understand the way in which very different groups and actions, often
with contending ideological positions, contribute to a broader process of social change. Adapting tools
from analysis of other broad-based social movements, this paper argues that these offer means to
understand the often apparently strange connections between profoundly disparate groups and
activities. How is it, for example that one encounters anarchist street activists welcomed at an event
designed to further corporate governance, international policy and industrial investment? However,
connecting such diversity across geographies and time requires challenge to some existing methods
and assumptions in social movement studies. The meta-analysis approach employed, taking a step
back from the immediate observational data, allows us to comprehend these complex processes and
cross ideological linkages.
After outlining some early examples to establish the continuity of cyclists’ collective actions, the paper
focuses on the problems posed by such a long and diverse history, and some of the ethical challenges
posed in developing a theoretical perspective that draws not only on this legacy but also on current
activism. It then outlines the model of interpretation developed and its attempts to solve the problem
of the political ethics of social movement research. The paper focuses on the method and ethics of
research in activist groups rather than presenting data on cycle activist groups themselves, so the
historical comparative examples presented (as follows) are only meant to be illustrative, not proof of
concept. They are drawn from a much larger piece of research that covers over a century of data,
selected on the basis of their ability for quick summary and capacity to stand alone.
2
Early histories
As soon as cyclists organised themselves into clubs for riding – even before the safety bicycle – they
began to campaign for better conditions in which to ride. Two early groups from the UK illustrate this.
The National Cyclists’ Union (NCU) was formed “To secure a fair and equitable administration of justice
as regards the rights of bicyclists on the public roads” and to organise and regulate cycle racing in
Great Britain (cited in Reid 2014: 63). Originally founded on 16 February 1878 as the Bicycle Union, it
went immediately into action over an amendment to the Highways Act and established the rights of
all cycles to be legally treated as carriages: that is, as vehicles with the same rights and obligations as
other road users (The Bicycle 1943: 3). The Bicycle Touring Club was founded in August 1878 to assist
cycling excursionists and changed its name to the Cyclists’ Touring Club (CTC) 5 years later to
emphasise the inclusion of (lady) tricyclists alongside its largely male (bicyclist) members (Lightwood
1928). At the same time, the Bicycle Union merged with the Tricycle Association to become the NCU.
Early combined actions by the two groups were to institute road signs to warn riders of conditions
such as steep hills. Cycling in Britain prior to the First World War remained a largely middle-class
activity, prices being kept deliberately high by a rigorously enforced manufacturers’ cartel (Pinkerton
1998). Only as usable second-hand machines became available did ridership broaden.
Similar action to defend the self-interest of cyclists can be seen in the formation of the Road
Improvement Association (RIA) in 1885 as another joint enterprise between the organisations. The
RIA organised conferences and produced pamphlets on road design, publicising macadamised
construction and asphalt (surface binding) treatments for more pleasant and safer conditions for all
travellers (Macadam 1821; Reid 2014). In parallel in the USA, the League of American Wheelmen was
behind the formation of the Good Roads League in 1892 (Epperson 2014). Another example of rightsbased action occurred as the CTC took a celebrated (and ultimately costly) legal action to defend
women’s right to wear rational dress in a celebrated test case in 1898. They took on an ultimately lost
a prosecution against the refusal to offer food to a traveller. Yet this immediately poses the question
3
as to whether the case was ultimately pursued to defend the plaintiff’s right as a woman or as a cyclist
or both: the rational dress issue united the two inseparably.
Self-representation and an emphasis on the rights of cyclists as cyclists was only one of the dimensions
of collective action. Explicitly socialist cycling clubs were also formed. The Clarion newspaper, founded
by Robert Blatchford in 1891. promoted a range of cultural and sporting activities (Prynn 1976). It
founded the National Clarion Cycle Club in 1895 for "the association of various Clarion Cycling Clubs
for the purpose of Socialist propaganda and for promoting inter-club runs between the clubs of
different towns" (Objects of the NCCC), following the prior foundation of a series of local Socialist or
Clarion Cycle Clubs, first in Birmingham and then in Liverpool, Bradford, Burnley and the Potteries.
Other socialist cycling clubs were formed, nationally and locally, elsewhere in Europe. For example
Solidarität, the ‘Worker’s Cycling Organization’ in Germany established in 1896 or the Copenhagenbased [Karl Marx] Arbejdernes Bicycle Club (ABC) of 1894 (Rabenstein 2001; Hoffman 2008). For the
socialist clubs cycling was a means to express a vision of wider socialist transformation: to reappropriate leisure for the majority of the population instead of it being a privilege of the bourgeoisie
alone. Practically, cycling together in the Clarion fulfilled a double role, both “[t]o propagate Socialism
and Good Fellowship” as stated in the Objects of the NCCC. This was a restatement of the club slogan
adapted from the William Morris quotation, “Fellowship is Life, Lack of Fellowship is Death”, which
served as part of the masthead of The Clarion (Riordan 2006) in a design by William Crane.
Cycling in ideologically identified clubs allowed participants a space for self-expression, free discussion
and acted as a means of propaganda rather than being exclusively an end in itself (although this it also
fulfilled this function). “The Bicycle”, wrote a prominent early member, “brought within easy reach all
the things which the new philosophy taught [people] to enjoy‟. It offered an “escape from city life
after the daily round of toil, and gave riders “the power to roam on the King’s Highway”. … “A luxury
hitherto almost the privilege of the within easy reach of all the beauties of the countryside could be
enjoyed by mere possession of the magic wheel” [quoted in Pye (1995:3)]. Clarion rides also served as
4
the spaces in which solidarities could be built and ideas discussed. In the latter half of the 1890s,
suffrage campaigners Sylvia and Christabel Pankhurst consistently rode with the Manchester Clarion
alongside Eve Gore-Booth, another of the city’s most prominent suffragists who linked campaigning
for the vote to struggles over women’s right to work and to unionisation (Liddington, J. 2014; Tiernan
2012). Suffrage and socialism were not separate campaigns for these activists (though Christabel
Pankhurst would soon disidentify from socialist aims.
In Bikes and Bloomers (2018) Kat Jungnickel shows how cycling further provided a means through
which women demonstrated innovation and entrepreneurship though design and patent of radically
new clothing patterns. Within the suffrage movement, cycling did not just allow women to travel
independently and unchaperoned but also laid the grounds for other forms of collective action and
the redefinition of social roles. Although the case was lost, the CTC’s legal action mentioned above
allows us a glimpse into the ways in which cycling activism might not just be about the bike.
Cycling activism more generally
Tracing a broader historical analysis of cycling activism, even in outline, requires a much longer study.
Carlton Reid’s Roads were not built for cars (2014) and Bike Boom: The Unexpected Resurgence of
Cycling (2017) together provide an invaluable general history of twentieth cycling campaigning,
illustrating the emergence of the campaigns and arguments of a range of groups although from a
journalistic, rather than academic perspective. For the purpose of this paper’s meta-analysis, a few
key points only need to be sketched out in order to ground the social movement analysis, and the
groups contextualised in broader discussions of the future of cities.
Post-1960s urban activism rediscovered cycling as both symbolic and practical means to reclaim the
city. Public demonstrations against proposed urban motorways in London, Amsterdam and Paris
expressed dismay at the existing trajectory of urban change and prompted the formation of new
activist networks and organisations across Europe (Cox 2015a, Feddes 2019). These took a range of
scales from local e.g. London Cycling Campaign (1978) to national, e.g. Fietsersbond, (NL 1975) ADFC
5
(W. Germany 1979). Social location and activity also varied. Social activities and spaces, bicycle co-ops,
cafés and festivals were paralleled by academic interest in cycling as a possibility for future mobility
(for example in the UK the Open University Alternative Technology Research Group, which, in
association with the OU New Towns Study Unit, organised a 1979 conference whose proceedings were
published as Developing Pedal Power (Brown & Potter 1979)). Other concerns were the practical
provision of infrastructural innovation, as voiced by Sustrans (UK 1977). Writers as diverse as Gorz
(1980 [1973]) and Illich (1973, 1974) contrasted cycling and motoring to illustrate their socio-political
analyses of the impact of technology on power relations.
Over the last 50 years, these patterns of activism have been repeated and elaborated globally. Bike
activisms take numerous forms and arguments and appear everywhere that people travel by bicycle.
Whether confrontational actions on the streets such as critical mass (Carlson 2002, Furness 2010), or
within the context of institutional lobbying groups working at intergovernmental level in Brussels (Cox
2015b); from local feminist bike workshops (Gamble 2017) through social enterprises (Zapata &
Zapata (2017) and environmental lobbying (Horton 2006) to the engagement of the transnational
cycle industry in funding activities that might lead to greater cycling numbers (Rosen 2002; ECF 2017);.
The research project of which this is paper is a small part traces some of these groups and practices in
detail, as well as drawing on existing published accounts so as to chart a large spectrum of activities
through to the present day. However, the focus here is on the method and the modelling produced in
this research.
What links diverse forms of cycle activism?
An opening question is whether these disparate actions and campaigns add up to a coherent social
movement. First, we need to consider what the linkage might be: ideology, class, ethnicity, identity
rights, all these are the bases for conventional social movements. Yet the range of bike activisms cuts
across these. Their common challenge to the status quo is obvious, as is the fact that they all ride
bicycles and issues around the riding of bicycles are involved in their actions and organising.
6
Is it perhaps more appropriate to think in terms of identity? Does the label ‘cyclist’ have any import?
Does it mean anything beyond the blandishment of a descriptive label for the use of a particular form
of machinery? It is easy to think of specific movements of cycling activism, and some activist groups
have no problem at all about describing themselves as part of a social movement but is there a bigger
picture able to encompass that large range of self-organised activity? Are activist claims for a coherent
movement any more than strategic essentialism, a defensive mechanism in the light of hostile
opposition?
Goodwin and Jasper’s succinct introductory definition argues that “a social movement is a collective,
organized, sustained, and noninstitutional challenge to authorities, powerholders, or cultural beliefs
and practices” (Goodwin and Jasper 2015 p.4). This seems straightforward enough and would seem
to fit the phenomena under consideration well enough, but even most enthusiastic academic analysts
of cycling activism hesitate to fully engage with bike activism in general through social movement
studies perspectives. Zack Furness (2010) argues, for example, that social movement studies forms a
useful lens through which to investigate cycling politics yet he shies away from sustained engagement
with the theoretical dimensions, refusing to describe cycling activism as in general as a social
movement. Social movement studies provide valuable approaches to deal with the analysis of
particular organisations and campaigns but the question must be posed whether the whole is more
than just the sum of its parts. Reviewing existing literature, we stand at an ambiguous point where
the status of cycle activism as a social movement is simultaneously both disputed and embraced by
those engaged in its actions.
Why the hesitation? The protesting activities of these groups, and their engagement in challenging
existing arrangements of the spatial distribution of power on the roads is clear, yet the differences
between these actions and the quasi-institutions that form out of them is considerable. Such a
diversity of actions, intentions and complex alliances militates against easy categorisation. It may be
easy to talk about specific movements and campaigns but to produce an overarching claim that it can
7
be instructive and meaningful to group them together in order to do more than provide comparative
studies (where sufficient commonalities for comparison might be found) is much more problematic.
Cycling activism as a social movement
If, instead of trying to solve this diversity problem in the abstract we turn instead to other authors
studies’, the path becomes clearer. Lofland (1995) insist that social movement as a term must retain
its value as a referent to amorphous conglomeration as well as to formal organisational forms. He
identifies this amorphousness as a valuable ingredient that allows for the formation of social
movement cultures: “To read the writings of movement members and to listen to them talk among
themselves is to encounter a stream of what we might think of as “movement stories” or when they’re
compressed as “movement slogans”” (Lofland 1995:204). The worlds that cycle campaigners inhabit
are multiple and diverse, but shared narratives provide means to unite them across division of both
space and of time.
Melucci (1996) further insists that the term social movement should be treated as a tool, an heuristic
rather than a fetish. Scholars, he argued, need always to bear in mind that the term is an attribution
of scholarship, that the coherence of any movement is a construction by those writing and speaking
about it, rather than a reality. If then, we take seriously Melucci’s argument that “Movements are not
entities… [they] are systems of action, complex networks among the different levels and meanings of
social action” (Melucci 2006 p.4), then the problem posed by the objections noted above begins to
dissipate. If social movements emerge in response to social change and effect social change, then the
disparity of groups in radically different social locations should be unremarkable. That there are
complex networks of interactions and shared social actions even shared visions are visible amongst
these networks (even when competing) allows us to overcome the barrier to considering bike activism
under a general label, as well as noting or studying specific instances of activism.
Approaching the problem this way, one can recognise both the scholarly activity of labelling as a
means to make sense of disparate elements, and the activist adoption of the language of a singular
8
movement as a form of strategic essentialism. In disputed territory and areas of social conflict,
especially those arising from states of relative powerlessness, to claim a unity with others, separated
either in time or geography, can be a source of strength and inspiration (Lowe & Yuk-Ha Tsang 2018).
Strategic essentialism, claiming a specific identity even when consciously aware that the singularity is
fictitious, is a tool for activism that allows engagement in the name of a greater entity than is actually
present (Nielsen 2013).
Diversity of action and ideology, even inconsistency, is not a problem in, for example, scholarship on
the peace movement. Peter Brock’s immense range of studies highlight a vast diversity of elements,
approaches, analyses and actions in peace movements over the centuries (see e.g. Brock 1991a,
1991b, 1991c Dyck 1999). Despite the many competing views and the need for distinction to be made
at a theoretical as well as practical-historical level of analysis, the field can be labelled as peace studies
or peace history. It is not unmeaningful to consider individual peace movement actions in specific
locations without separating them from the wider context, and drawing comparisons between very
different actors can still demonstrate meaningful results.
Continuing this analogy, rather than trying to prove a point by looking for the (distinguishing)
characteristics of a cycling social movement, we can take this as read, as an heuristic device that allows
deeper questions to be asked. We can instead turn our attention to the more precise question of what
is it that cyclists working for change do? Are there patterns visible in the actions and arguments of
different examples? Approaching the problem this way, a large dataset is available. Either through
printed materials, news reports, direct observation and interview, people reveal their own selfunderstandings of action and analysis.
Locating the research and outlining method
Before explaining the dataset used to ground this study, my own self-role as a sometime bike activist
needs acknowledgement and reflection. I first became involved with a network of local cycle activists
in the UK in the early 1990s. Connections were made, national gatherings attended, festivals were
9
organised. With a university training in anthropology and ethnographic methods and having studied
social movement and social activism at both undergraduate and Doctoral level, I began looking more
widely at cycle activism as a form of community engagement and social action in the early 2000s.
While I was no longer directly involved, my academic studies allowed me to maintain engagement
with the international networks of activists pursuing change in mobility regimes. And for more than
15 years I have been constructively engaged in the development of social science cycling studies as a
means of understanding and better engaging with the processes of mobility transformation and urban
change. Currently, I work with the ECF as Chair of the Scientists for Cycling Network, for academics
who want to put their expertise at the service of the ECF’s international lobbying work. Part of this
task is also connecting and supporting those working on aspects of cycling and has further allowed
privileged access to grassroots forums and groups from Taipei to Brazil (see box 1).
As part of this I have attended the annual Velo-City conferences which serve as a meeting point for
professional lobbyists and policy makers, together with representatives of activist networks and
groups. The events have become more corporate over the years, reflecting the changing field of cycle
advocacy, and lengthy discussions have consequently been had with grassroots groups who feel that
they no longer have a voice in such a professional process. Tradeshows and cycling festivals also form
another useful source of information and conversation with cycle advocates and these have similarly
informed my analysis. When travelling for academic conferences, I have also frequently made a point
of seeking out local cycling projects to obtain a sense of what is going on. Consequently this analysis
is not based on a discrete data set, but with observations, conversations and engagements made over
a 25 year period.
10
Box 1. Networking meetings attended
2005
2006
2007
2009
2010
2012
2013
2015
2016
2017
2017
2017
2018
2019
Dublin
Cape Town
Munich
Brussels
Copenhagen
Vancouver
Vienna
Nantes
Taipei
Nijmegen
Mexico City
Recife Brazil
Rio de Janeiro
Dublin
Ireland (Velo-City)
South Africa (Velo-Mondiale)
Germany (Velo-City)
Belgium (Velo-City)
Denmark (Velo-City)
Canada (Velo-City)
Austria (Velo-City)
France (Velo-City)
Taiwan (Velo-City)
The Netherlands (Velo-City)
(Foro Mundial de la Bicicleta)
(Biciclutura)
Brazil (Velo-City)
Ireland (Velo-City)
Taking a cue from sociolinguistic analysis, the process of data collection was to build a corpus of
material sufficient to reach a saturation point in terms of themes and observations that could be
derived from the material. Some archives were mined comprehensively to chart longitudinal
development in a single geographical location (UK). Some cycling magazines as literature sources
allowed investigation over a span of ten to twenty years (Cycling Plus, Bike Culture Quarterly,
VeloVision), others (The CTC Gazette and its successor publications) allowed a view over a century (see
Bosi & Rieter 2014). Other sources were examined less systematically once a relative homogeneity
became evident. Saturation point was reached when no new insights were being returned and the
same ideas and themes were repeated as the literature continued. Incidentally, this repetition reflects
the expected turnover in readership and periods of engagement in activity. While stalwart longstanding subscribers make their presence and views known publicly, these are not the norm of those
engaged. Rapid saturation and stagnation of ideas was most visible in recent online discussion boards.
Interestingly, many of the themes identified in recent discussions were also visible in the older
historical material. Online forums, newspaper comment and blogposts, together with their
correspondents frequently yielded little but a hardening, even ossification, of attitude and entrenched
positions.
11
More informative and more diverse were encounters outside virtual reality. Engaged conversations,
especially those outside the realm of formal interviews and presentations yielded more open
exchanges of views and more subtly nuanced positions taken in the debate. Multiple notebooks were
filled in the attempts to capture ethnographically the contents and flavours of these expressed
emotions and personal positionality. Importantly, many are shaped in off-guard moments, appearing
in direct response to situational mobilities, revealed only by riding with ‘interviewees’.
Research ethics in social movement studies
This methodological approach has a second important dimension, the relations between researcher
and researched (see Milan 2014). While I have been gathering data on these activities for many years,
I have deliberately published virtually nothing. A few conference papers have appeared as outcomes
of specific investigations, but little has been done in the general analysis or description of cycling social
movements to date. The reason is effectively two-fold.
First, discussants in cycling studies are not just academic researchers, but their very participation in
the debates, the conferences and the networks shapes the international debates. Analysts and
academics are part of the activism and policy debates on which they comment and which they analyse.
Thus, the study of activism from one who has been engaged in the debates and has knowledge of
those debates as a full participant not just as an observer, demands respect for the integrity of persons
and processes involved. The term observer-participant has been used to contrast this degree of
engagement with the more common status of participant-observer but recognising the fundamental
role responsibility as a participant means that knowledge of discussions and processes has to remain
privileged to those other participants in dialogue (Uldam & McCurdy 2013).
This links to the second argument over the place of research in that in the study of social movements,
there is always a danger of parasitism. The academic study of other’s activism can all too easily lead
to extractivism, where the subject of investigation is simply mined as a raw material for interview data
to feed the academic publishing and career of the researcher. A scepticism towards conventional
12
information gathering methods involving human subjects is a necessary outcome of re-evaluating
research methods in light of Santos’ arguments on imperialist epistemologies. As he argues,
“Postabyssal scientific knowledge is always coknowledge emerging from processes of knowing-with
rather than knowing-about. Its autonomy is relative. It requires constant self-reflexivity in order to
fulfil the double criterion of trust” (Santos 2018 p. 147). Cognitive justice demands that the production
of knowledge is considered very carefully (see Santos 2007). Even the standard assurance of informed
consent is no guarantee that information or knowledge obtained by the interviewer will not ultimately
be transformed into profit for the academic researcher, without any real benefit accruing to the
‘subject’ of research. Gains from the knowledge produced by the activist go disproportionately to the
social movement researcher. In social movement studies, this problem can be acute as scholars gain
from studying the life risks of others: yet another iteration of extractivism.
Consequently, this research only emerges now as a result of permissions and encouragements given
by those current activists with whom it has been developed and wish to see it shared with a wider
public. This reflects a concern with political responsibility in research not just the standard ethical
concerns and the necessary safeguarding concerns. Commitment to the wider political project with
which the activism is concerned raises obligations beyond those generally acknowledged in academic
research network guidance.
Modelling diverse activism
Following Melucci’s framing of social movement as a heuristic, and recognising his analysis of social
movements as one of many possible forms of collective action, the paper now turns to social
movement studies to find suitable frames through which to better understand the broad spectrum of
cycling activisms.
In her study of community organizing groups, Smock (2004) produces a sophisticated fivefold typology
(see table 1). Against these five ideal types, through case study analysis (primary and secondary),
Smock considers how these models approach a number of thematic topic areas
13
Table 1. Models of Community Organising (adapted from Smock 2004 pp.33-34)
Model
Theory of urban change
Organizing the
community
Impacting the public sphere
Build power
People’s organisation
Conflict and confrontation
Community- Building
Rebuild social fabric
Collaborative
partnership
Legitimacy and collaboration
Civic
Restore social order
Informal forum
Accessing existing channels
Power-based
Women-Centred
Link public and private Support team
spheres
Interpersonal relationships
Transformative
Structural change
Creating alternative
frameworks
Social movement
Developing these further she breaks these down in further tabular form considering in multiple ways
how the five models each build individual capacity, community capacity, create community
governance structures, diagnose and frame the community’s problems and the strategies and
outcomes that each model adopts and pursues. The coding process she produces to examine
disparate models of change is a valuable one. As an organisational analysis tool, it provided an
invaluable checklist for interpretation of activist and advocacy groups in cycling. However, the
correlation of the thematic areas of activity against an ideal type did not fit my data. Groups in my
selection would adopt multiple different strategies and techniques, not always compatible with their
core values and expectations. Pragmatism and opportunity would over-ride a sense of continuity and
coherence to the model of change that appeared at the heart of the group. Smock’s approach was
useful for diagnosis, but too restrictive in its correlation of actions and group types. It did not fare well
against the changing activities of the networks whose literatures I read and the persons with whom I
spoke. The issues identified provided an important starting point of the coding process but crossreferencing them to a typology of groups was not viable.
Rooted in organisational theory approaches to organising for change, Smock’s analysis highlights
limitations of analytical frames that seek to correlate ideology, tactics and organisational form. While
14
such frames have been useful for analysis of specific cases, they hinder understanding of complex
collective actions over a broader perspective and require degrees of coherence often not visible or
present in real life activism.
Similarly, although direct tactics and campaigns could be understood through their orientation
towards the state and particularly, in many cases to policy formation, this only accounted for the direct
activism and that based on promoting or defending cyclists’ rights. Much of the activity revealed in
the study material comprised small, everyday acts of resistance, and acts of witness: even riding to
work on a mundane basis could be transformed, in hostile circumstances, into a visible (and conscious)
act of defiance to dominant patterns of automobility. While one could dismiss such activity as bloodymindedness or trivial, it was in these everyday acts of resistance that much of the identity formation
was founded. Trying to map actions in their relation to the state was found to result in an overly
reductionist modelling, necessarily narrowing understanding of movements to specific goal
orientation and achievement. While these elements may be present, and indeed central to
campaigning strategies, such approaches do not account for the breadth, diversity and longevity of
bike activism. Indeed, a focus on everyday acts of resistance allows us to reemphasise the manner in
which “social movements set out to influence both the normative and material dimensions of politics
and society” (Lynch, 1999 p.19). It is in the repetition of everyday acts that this normative dimension
is realised, subtly normalising practices once deemed deviant or obscure. Social practice theory
(Shove, Pantzar and Watson 2012; see also Strengers and Maller (eds.) 2012) further allows us to see
how the meanings of actions can be transformed even while the material act remains the same.
A more flexible approach to understanding the complex and often contradictory realities of organising
for change is found in John Lofland’s (1993) analysis of the US peace movement in the 1980s, Polite
Protestors. He surveys a range of different activisms and mobilisations, recognising multiple forms of
organisation and approaches. Importantly, he starts his analysis from the observation that social
movement actors constantly theorise change – even if this is not clearly or explicitly articulated. Thus,
15
a key role of scholarship is neither to superimpose a socio-political role upon actions or to interpret
them in terms of their functionality within the larger system dynamics, but to understand how
movement actors
a) make declarations relating to ends (analyses of what is wrong), and
b) make pronouncements relating to means (what must be done)
From this, the observer can begin to grasp the expectations of change latent in these pronouncements
and judgements even when not outwardly articulated. Pursuing this method, he produces a six-fold
typology of models of change to be found among the many different groups. Importantly, Lofland
emphasises that the models of change he identifies are not to be seen either as exclusive, or to be
connected with any specific group. Where Smock fits case studies into her tabular matrix of types,
Lofland examines his cases and shows how each exhibits several different, competing models of
change simultaneously. Some of these can be more obviously bundled together than others. While
clearly developed out of a study of peace movement organisations, the six categories lent themselves
very clearly to map the variety of ideas circulating amongst the groups and campaigns I had been
studying.
16
Change theories codified:
a) idealist
Transcender theory: promote rapid shifts of mass consciousness = Proper realization of the reality
of the situation will produce major shifts in consciousness and behaviour
Educator theory: communicate facts and reasoning = active need to teach
Intellectual theory: produce new facts and reasoning = production of new knowledge for change
b) political
Politician theory: Political electioneering and lobbying = either within existing political groupings
or building anew.
Protest theory: force issues by Non co-operation and disruption = active disruption (intervention)
and passive non co-operation (less well articulated)
Prophet theory: Affect deep moral regeneration = radical discontinuity with existing order
Source: Lofland, (1993) Polite Protesters
Rather than identifying an ideal type, against which could be read from a theory of change, Lofland
examines the literatures and actions of the different groups and networks to identify underlying
assumptions that groups appear to be working with. Often, groups’ theories of change are not explicit
or consciously articulated. Careful and sensitive reading may be required to tease out buried ideas.
Placing academic analysis external to the actors themselves and giving it a role as an interpreter risks
placing social movement scholarship at a remove, with privileged insight. Potentially, it then suggests
that the one who studies the movement can understand what the actors within the movement are
doing better than the movement actors themselves. Here we are back in the dangerous territory of
superimposing external expertise upon the actors themselves. The imperialist epistemology Santos
argues against can reappear despite the best of intentions. Only therefore, by testing this modelling
process with those engaged in everyday activism could it be legitimated. While the analysis of cycling
activism conducted using Lofland’s approach (or any other) might have been an interesting intellectual
17
exercise, it necessarily had to remain entirely a personal insight unless and until validated through
conversation and discussion with those whose actions it enabled me to understand.
Lofland groups his six categories into two basic orientations, echoing Bob Overy’s earlier (1982) work
on peace movements. Overy contrasted prophetic and practical actions, aligning either or both with
actions either to force policy change or to create a different society. Here we pick up the two distinct
categories of cycling activism identified at the outset, either actions to create policy change, to realise
or defend rights, or actions intended to assist movement towards a broader reorientation of society.
Overy’s prophetic and practical binary categorisations (in which he is relatively dismissive of the
former) are developed much more sensitively by Pleyers’ (2010), in his understanding and interpreting
contemporary activism as alter-globalization. Faced with a similar diversity of responses and types of
action, Pleyers suggests a constant and unresolved tension between the way of reason and the way
of subjectivity as two principles underlying action. Rationality and affect are not separate and
antithetical categories for Pleyers, but are characteristics involved in the inner tensions of all activism.
Similarly, these two dimensions were clearly visible within the discourses produced within cycling
activism. However, it still remained necessary to analyse cycling activism on its own terms and to do
so required development of Lofland’s model of change theories.
Change theories in cycling activism
Once again, before describing the categories it is important to emphasise that these are not distinct
and exclusive categories. They exist bundled together in complex sets and contradictory tendencies
are visible within clusters held by groups. Such tensions may be resolved temporally by shifts in
attitude and action over time but may also lead to friction and fissure. Or their continued co-existence
may be a source of dynamic internal interplay as participants constantly read and re-read both their
situation and the tactics appropriate to it. Changing contexts of action due to external events may also
lead to these shifts.
18
Combining the insights of these models and applying them to the cycling activism produces a six-fold
analysis of models of change in cycling activism.
Contagion
The fundamental assumption is that change spreads virally. There may be a number of different
triggers but the important thing for campaigners is to highlight the correct trigger. Once that is in place
it is assumed that change will spread by contagion. It can be seen clearly expressed in the slogan “build
it and they will come”, referring to infrastructural innovation. Underlying this may be an unexamined
dependence on rational choice modelling, assuming that individuals and groups are (subconsciously)
calculating entities able to “catch on” once a suitable seed is planted. However, contagion models of
change are not dependent on rational choice or utilitarian models and may express and link with other
mechanisms.
Education
Change requires appropriate knowledge of how to act. This may be at the individual or at the collective
level, but what is essential is that people can learn how to act appropriately in order to change the
bigger picture. Better knowledge of the problem and its solutions will create the change. This model
is often part of the assumptions around individual behaviour change and may be exemplified in the
provision of cycle skills training, for example.
Innovation
Similar to education, but may be more strongly linked to structural changes as well as individual.
Innovations can be in knowledge or technologies. The main point is the assumption that new ideas or
possibilities will alter the situation. In turn, this will allow new opportunities for change. In the case of
knowledge, new discourses may change the political situation. In the example of technology, the
introduction of an innovation such as a public bike scheme or the e-bike is understood as crucial for
change. Often, innovation is assumed to lead to contagious change, but, may equally require
structured connection with institutional or educational change
19
Institutional
This is usually the most familiar assumption about processes of structural change. Engagement with
existing political and civic institutions is seen as essential and necessary for change to occur. “The long
march through the institutions”, engaging in the lobbying and policy formation process is necessary
to bring about the required transformations. Institutional change may also be understood and
expressed in terms of orientation towards governmental intervention (at local national or
international levels). Pressure for structured programmes and incentives are often underpinned by
this assumption.
Disruption
For change to occur, some form of a crisis needs to be forced. Action must be taken to confront
problems and highlight them. Disruption is not always confrontational or negative in its character. It
may also take the form of celebratory acts that disrupt the ordinary passage of events and highlight
different realities or ways of thinking. Many Critical Mass actions reflect this idea and exhibit both
dimensions of reaction and celebration. Street motor-traffic closures for ciclovia are an example of a
disruptive act made possible through institutional intervention, providing opportunities for citizens to
experience streets in a new way.
Prefiguration
Less rooted in identifying specific goals and mechanisms Both Lofland (1993) and Melucci (1996)
describe this as “prophetic” action. In other words, “be the change you want to see”. Labelling it
prefigurative takes away the religious or moral language and points to the strongly political dimension
often hidden by the term “lifestyle” also used to describe these actions. Bike Kitchens and community
co-ops often strongly exhibit this idea, but it can also be extended to many smaller acts of defiance or
everyday practices of resistance.
Each of these categories can be read as an area of focus and a motivating factor for action. They are
not discrete or separate but bundled together in differing proportions and ratios. A single group’s
20
actions might demonstrate different patterns from campaign to campaign. As a diagnostic tool the
categorisation of different models of change allowed the researcher to better understand and
distinguish the variety of actions and approaches, while being able to understand their combined
contributions to a cohesive whole which does not rely on the denial or removal of contradictions (see
Pleyers 2010).
Application
These categories were derived from cross-coding both Smock’s categories and Lofland’s theories of
change onto the mass of data assembled in researching cycle activism. The modified categories were
then outlined. Aware that this research should not be presented as the result of an extractive process
and its obligations to the communities whose actions and knowledge have created this knowledge,
the models were shared with activist groups in Brazil, as well as among scholars and experts in the UK
and internationally through the Velo-city conference. For ease of use, examples related to specific
organisations were mapped as categories on a radar plot. As in figure 1
Figure 1 radar plot of theories of change
Contagion
1
0.8
Prefiguration
0.6
0.4
Education
0.2
0
Disruption
Innovation
Institutional
21
Initially perceived as strength and weakness map, conversations with a national gathering of bike
activist groups allowed this to be reframed as a diagnostic tool. It could be used to identify implicit
assumptions being made by individuals or by groups and to identify where sources of conflict might
lie. Further the appropriateness of any given tactic vis-a-vis a particular struggle or opponent could be
better analysed. As a tool for self-analysis the theories of change model had the potential to be
developed as part of a practical toolkit. Openness and communication are vital elements in activist
struggles and the building of collectively across antagonistic differences is always a challenge. By
understanding the different theories of change at work, diversity and difference can be interpreted as
elements of complementarity instead of incompatibility. The model allows for diffusion of conflict
through better understanding of differences and for analysis of the degree of match between goals
and tactics. It further enabled dialogue to open between anticipated outcomes, the aspirations and
the tactics employed within groups.
The models of change approach, validated through dialogue, could then be reapplied across the full
corpus of data as a more academic exercise, and utilised to provide an interpretative framework for a
full-length study of cycling activism. Knowledge generation in social movement research is
demonstrated, as both Pleyers 2010 and Santos 2018 insist, as an iterative process. It is co-produced
with activist communities, and these communities are spread over time. Bike activism connects across
generations and awareness of actions that have occurred previously or in other locations are part of
the toolkit that sustains activism in a long struggle.
22
References
Abord de Chatillon, Margot, 2019 Women in gear(s): exploring gender in the path to velonomy. Paper
presented to Cycling and Society Symposium, University of Chester Sept.1-4
Aldred, R. 2012 The Role of Advocacy and Activism in John Parkin (ed.) Cycling and Sustainability
[Transport and Sustainability Volume 1] Bingley, UK: Emerald 2012 pp.83-100
Aldred, R. 2013 Who are Londoners on Bikes and what do they want? Negotiating identity and issue
definition in a ‘pop-up’ cycle campaign. Journal of Transport Geography 30: 194–201. DOI:
10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2013.01.005
Balkmar D. & Summerton, J. (2017) Contested mobilities: politics, strategies and visions in Swedish
bicycle activism, Applied Mobilities, 2:2, 151-165, DOI: 10.1080/23800127.2017.1293910
Bosi L & Reiter, H. 2014 Historical Methodologies. Archival research and oral history in social
movement research. In Della Porta, D. (ed.) Methodological practices in social movement
research Oxford: Oxford University Press
Brock P., 1991b Freedom from War. Nonsectarian Pacifism 1814-1914 Toronto: University of Toronto
Press
Brock P., 1991c Studies in Peace History York: William Sessions
Brock, P. 1991a Freedom From Violence. Sectarian non-resistance from the Middle Ages to the Great
War Toronto: University of Toronto Press
Brown, A., & Potter, S (eds.) 1979 Developing Pedal Power Milton Keynes: Open University
Candipan, Jennifer. 2019. ""Change Agents" on Two Wheels: Claiming Community and Contesting
Spatial Inequalities through Cycling in Los Angeles." City & Community 18 (3): 965-982.
doi:10.1111/cico.12430.
Carlson, 2002 Critical Mass: Bicycling’s Defiant Demonstration AK Press
Casteñeda, P., (2020) From the Right to Mobility to the Right to the Mobile City: Playfulness and
Mobilities in Bogotá’s Cycling Activism. Antipode 52(1) 58-77
Cox, P. 2015a Cycling, environmentalism and change in 1970s Britain. Paper presented at Mobility and
Environment, 13.02.2015 – 14.02.2015, Kerschensteiner Kolleg, Deutsches Museum, Munich
Cox, P. 2015b Social movement activism, social change and bicycling in the UK. Paper presented for
panel on "Cycling practices and sustainable mobility transitions" at the T²M/Cosmobilities
Joint Conference "The Future of Mobilities: Flows, Transport and Communication" in Santa
Maria C.V. (Caserta), Italy from September 14th to 17th, 2015
Dyck, H.L. (ed.) 1999 The Pacifist impulse in historical perspective Toronto: University of Toronto Press
ECF (European Cyclists’ Federation) 2017 EU Cycling Strategy. Recommendations for delivering green
growth and an effective mobility system in 2030 Brussels: ECF
Epperson, B., 2014. Bicycles in American Highway Planning: The Critical Years of Decision-Making,
1969–1991. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co.
Feddes, F. and de Lange, M. (2019) Bike City Amsterdam: How Amsterdam Became the Cycling Capital
of the World, Amsterdam: uitg. Bas Lubberhuizen.
Furness, Z. M., 2010 One Less Car: Bicycling and the Politics of Automobility. Philadelphia: Temple UP
23
Gamble, Julie (2017) Experimental Infrastructure: Experiences in Bicycling in Quito, Equador.
International Journal of Urban And Regional Research 41(1) 162-180 DOI:10.1111/14682427.12449
Goodwin, J. and J.M. Jasper (2015) ‘Editors’ Introduction’, in J. Goodwin and J.M. Jasper: (eds.) the
Social Movements Reader: Cases and Concepts [3rd ed.] Oxford: Wiley Blackwell 1-8 p.4
Gorz, A., 1980. Ecology as Politics. London: Pluto, pp. 69–76 [Chapter Originally Published as the Social
Ideology of the Motor Car, le Sauvage, September–October 1973].
Hoffman, Aage. 2008. “Arbejderidrættens Forhold til Socialdemikratiet ca 1880-ca 1925.”
Arbejderhistorie 1: 96-115.
Horton, Dave 2006 Environmentalism and the Bicycle Environmental Politics 15(1)
Illich, I., 1973. Tools for Conviviality. London: Calder and Boyars.
Illich, I., 1974. Energy and Equity. London: Calder and Boyars.
Jungnickel, K., 2018. Bikes and Bloomers. London: Goldsmiths’ Press.
Liddington, J. 2014 Vanishing for the Vote: Suffrage, Citizenship and the Battle for the Census
Manchester: Manchester University Press
Lightwood, J.T., 1928. The Cyclists’ Touring Club: Being the Romance of Fifty Years’ Cycling. London:
CTC.
Lofland J (1995) Charting degrees of movement culture: tasks of the cultural cartographer. In Johnston
and Klandermans (eds.) 1995 Social Movements and Culture Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press pp.188-216
Lofland, J., 1993. Polite Protesters: The American Peace Movement of the 1980s. New York: Syracuse
University Press.
Lowe, J., & Yuk-Ha Tsang, E. (2018). Securing Hong Kong's identity in the colonial past: Strategic
essentialism and the umbrella movement. Critical Asian Studies, 50(4), 556-571.
doi:10.1080/14672715.2018.1503550
Lynch C., 1999 Beyond appeasement: Interpreting interwar peace movements in world politics Ithaca
Cornell University Press
Macadam, John Loudon (1818) Remarks on the present system of road making originally, 4th ed. 1821
Melucci, A. 1996 Challenging Codes Collective action in the information age Cambridge University
Press
Milan, S. 2014 The Ethics of Social Movement Research. In Della Porta, D. (ed.) Methodological
practices in social movement research Oxford: Oxford University Press pp. 446-464
Nielsen, C. R. (2013). Frantz Fanon and the Négritude Movements: How strategic essentialism
subverts Manichean binaries. Callaloo, 36(2), 342352. https://doi.org/10.1353/cal.2013.0084
Overy, Bob 1982 How Effective Are Peace Movements? Montreal: Harvest House
Pinkerton, John. 1998. “Who Put the Working Man on A Bicycle?” in Oddy, Nicholas and Rob van der
Plas, eds. Cycle History 8 Proceedings of the 8th International Cycle History Conference,
Glasgow. San Francisco: Van der Plas Publications: 101-106
Pleyers, G. 2010 Alter-Globalization: Becoming actors in the global age Cambridge: Polity
24
Prynn, David. 1976. “The Clarion Clubs, Rambling and the Holiday Associations in Britain since the
1890s.” Journal of Contemporary History 11 nos. 2/3 [Special Issue: Conflict and Compromise:
Socialists and Socialism in the Twentieth Century]: 65-77.
Pye, Dennis. 1995. Fellowship is Life: the Story of the Clarion Cycling Club. Bolton: Clarion Publishing.
Rabenstein, Rüdiger. 2001. “The History of German Workers‟ Cycling Association, Solidarity.” in Cycle
History 11: Proceedings of the 11th International Cycle History Conference San Francisco: Van
der Plas Publications: 160-168
Reid, C., 2015. Roads Were Not Built for Cars. Newcastle: Front Page.
Reid, Carlton (2017) Bike Boom: The Unexpected Resurgence of Cycling. Washington: Island Press
Riordan, James. 2006. “Amateurism, Sport and the Left: Amateurism for All Versus Amateur Elitism.”
Sport in History 26 no. : 468-483 DOI: 10.1080/17460260601066233.
Rosen, Paul 2002 “Up the Vélorution: Appropriating the Bicycle and the Politics of Technology” SATSU
Working paper N24 2002. Subsequently published in: Ron Eglash, Julien Bleecker, Jennifer
Croissant, Rayvon Fouché & Giovanna Di Chiro (eds.) Appropriating Technology University of
Minnesota Press
Santos, B de Sousa (ed.) 2007 Another Knowledge is Possible. Beyond Northern Epistemologies
London: Verso
Santos, B de Sousa 2018 The End of the Cognitive Empire. The coming of age of epistemologies of the
South Durham: Duke University Press
Shove, E., Pantzar, M., and Watson, M., 2012. The Dynamics of Social Practice: Everyday Life and How
It Changes. London: Sage.
Smock, Kristina (2004) Democracy in Action. Community organizing and Urban Change New York, NY.
Columbia University Press
Strengers, Y. and Maller, C., eds. 2012. Social Practices, Intervention and Sustainability: Beyond
Behaviour Change. Abingdon: Routledge.
Tan, H. & Miguel A. Martínez López (2020) Dancing with shackles? The sociopolitical opportunities,
achievements, and dilemmas of cycling activism in Guangzhou, China, Journal of Urban Affairs,
42:2, 241-256, DOI: 10.1080/07352166.2019.1592650
The Bicycle, UK, 17 February 1943, p3. “The NCU”
Tiernan, S. 2012 Eva-Gore-Booth: An image of such politics Manchester: Manchester University Press
Uldam, J., & McCurdy, P. (2013). Studying social movements: Challenges and opportunities for
participant observation. Sociology Compass, 7(11), 941951. https://doi.org/10.1111/soc4.12081
von Schneidemesser, D., Jeremias Herberg, Dorota Stasiak, (2020) Re-claiming the responsivity gap:
The co-creation of cycling policies in Berlin’s mobility law, Transportation Research
Interdisciplinary Perspectives, 8, 100270, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trip.2020.100270.
Zapata Campos, María José & Zapata, Patrik (2017) Infiltrating citizen-driven initiatives for
sustainability, Environmental Politics, 26:6, 1055-1078, DOI:
10.1080/09644016.2017.1352592
25