Car-free movement
The car-free movement is an informal network of individuals and organizations who would like to see cars used less in modern cities. It includes social activists, urban planners and others who would like to see alternative ways of moving people for environment or quality of life. They encourage walking, cycling or use of public transportation.[1]
References
- ↑ Geopositioning and Mobility, eds. Ahmed Nait-Sidi-Moh; Mohamed Bakhouya; et al. (London: ISTE; Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2013), p. 160
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Practices | |
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Religious and spiritual |
- Amish
- Aparigraha
- Asceticism
- Detachment
- Distributism
- Gandhism
- Jesus movement
- Mendicant
- Mindfulness
- Monasticism
- New Monasticism
- Plain dress
- Plain people
- Quakers
- Rastafari
- Temperance
- Testimony of simplicity
- Tolstoyan movement
- Twelve Tribes communities
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Secular movements |
- Back-to-the-land
- Car-free
- Environmental
- Hippie
- Open Source Ecology
- Slow
- Small house
- Tiny house
- Transition town
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Notable writers | |
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Modern-day adherents (or followers) | |
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Media |
- "Anekdote zur Senkung der Arbeitsmoral"
- Escape from Affluenza
- The Good Life
- The Moon and the Sledgehammer
- Mother Earth News
- The Power of Half
- Small Is Beautiful
- Walden
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Related | |
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