Seeking equity and justice in urban freight: where to look?
Journal article, 2023

Urban freight systems embed and reflect spatial inequities in cities and imbalanced power structures within transport decision-making. These concerns are principal domains of “transportation justice” (TJ) and “mobility justice” (MJ) scholarship that have emerged in the past decade. However, little research exists situating urban freight within these prevailing frameworks, which leaves urban freight research on socio-environmental equity and justice ill-defined, especially compared to passenger or personal mobility discussions. Through the lens that derives from TJ and MJ’s critical dialogue, this study synthesises urban freight literature’s engagement with equity and justice. Namely, the review evaluates: How do researchers identify equitable distributions of urban freight’s costs and benefits? At what scale do researchers evaluate urban freight inequities? And who does research consider entitled to urban freight equity and how are they involved in urban freight governance? The findings help inform researchers who seek to reimagine urban freight management strategies within broader equity and justice discourse.

Urban freight

last mile delivery

equity

environmental justice

transportation justice

ecommerce

Author

Travis Fried

University of Washington

Anne Goodchild

University of Washington

Michael Browne

University of Gothenburg

Ivan Sanchez-Diaz

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Service Management and Logistics

Transport Reviews

0144-1647 (ISSN) 1464-5327 (eISSN)

Vol. 44 1 191-212

Subject Categories

Economics and Business

DOI

10.1080/01441647.2023.2247165

More information

Latest update

3/7/2024 9