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Bio
Dr Wilbert den Hoed is a human geographer with a core interest in mobility, ageing and sustainable urban development. In 2018, he obtained his PhD at Newcastle University, where he worked on the EPSRC-project MyPlace which studied age-friendly city environments from sociological, geographical, urban design and digital civics disciplines. His thesis focused on the role of urban cycling as facilitator of sustainable mobility, wellbeing and positive ageing over the lifecourse. As part of this, he developed the interactive platform CycleStories to document the experiences of older cyclists in Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Until 2021, Wilbert worked as Research Associate at the European Policies Research Centre, which is based at Strathclyde University and Delft University of Technology. He has worked in a varied set of projects for European and national institutions, with urban and regional development policy as common denominators. He specialises in policy analysis and qualitative research on subjects such as the energy transition, EU Cohesion Policy, national regional policy and urban planning, and has participated in knowledge exchange and capacity-building activities.
Currently, Wilbert is a Marie Curie Postdoctoral Researcher in the Department of Geography of the URV, a member of the Territorial Analysis and Tourism Studies Research Group (GRATET) and a visiting researcher at the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC). He leads the ENTOURAGE project which investigates active mobility transformations in European tourist cities and their effects on the social inclusion of older residents and visitors. The project analyses the practices of negotiation of urban space and the use of new accessible mobility systems by older visitors and residents, and the discourses in policy and practice around social inclusion and age diversity in sustainable mobility. The analyses take place in the city of Barcelona, using the case studies in Amsterdam and Venice as references for policy and practical approaches. These three cities are all affected by social and mobility exclusion stemming from ‘over-tourism’ and, recently, the international tourism slowdown, for which the project will explore new requirements to inform inclusive and sustainable post-COVID-19 recovery strategies.
Research Interests
Papers共 9 篇Author StatisticsCo-AuthorSimilar Experts
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Urban, Planning and Transport Researchno. 1 (2024)
Regional Studiesno. 10 (2023): 2115-2116
REGIONAL STUDIESno. 10 (2023): 2115-2116
user-5fe1a78c4c775e6ec07359f9(2016)
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Author Statistics
#Papers: 7
#Citation: 38
H-Index: 3
G-Index: 6
Sociability: 2
Diversity: 0
Activity: 0
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