Through Internet and Friends: Translation of Air Pollution Research in Malmö Municipality, Sweden
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Knowledge Translation in Previous Research
2. Materials and Methods
- What education, previous types of employment and pre-knowledge do you have in your field, and how do you apply this in your professional life?
- Please describe how a project (in traffic- or environmental planning) arrives at your desk, how you start working on it and what obstacles or insecurities do you and your co-workers encounter when it comes to the effects of your actions…
- What kind of information do you normally rely on to carry out your projects in the most knowledgeable and efficient way?
- How do you access information regarding your work? What are your preferred channels of information? How do you trust your channels and evaluate them?
- Is there anything you miss out on when it comes to taking the best-informed decisions, or any channels for information you wish you and your office had access to?
- What obstacles do you encounter when looking for the latest information in relation to your work, and what do you wish could be organised differently for you to be more knowledgeable or well-informed when facing challenges in your work?
3. Findings and Discussions
3.1. “Actually an Academic”—Personal Educational History
- I’m originally a political science student and took a masters’ degree, and I have an additional grade in environmental science. So, I’m an environmental science and policy graduate person.- So, your first degree was more to the science side?- No, it was an international master’s degree, a transdisciplinary one, but there were many scientific courses too. A lot of focus on system analysis. There was environmental economy and environmental law [too], and international environmental policy. So–a great variety. And then I graduated.
- I started working here in 2002, with traffic issues. It was an entrance to a position about environmentally friendly commuting […]. “Mobility management”, it was called back then. […] Then it turned increasingly into investigative work [utredningsarbete], developing the traffic environment programme. I became a project manager there […] and became a consultant in traffic, environment and sustainable transportation. [I have] worked more with heavy vehicles too, logistics […] and some energy issues […], logistics […], fuels […] vehicle fleets […]. Came back here after six years and was hired as a project leader for urban logistics. […] Air quality issues, attached to environmental quality norms, which we’ve faced some problems with…
- Well, I don’t know... It’s been a while since I was a student, now it’s more… You lay some sort of basis, but then it’s due to these years when you’ve been working with a variety of issues which I feel have formed my basis.- A professional experience?- Yes, yes, precisely, to be able to review the material, to grasp [the content of] reports and other things. Maybe one thing I’ve brought with me [from higher education] is to sort out reports which don’t seem robust or to be able to draw conclusions that “this study is much too small for making this kind of generalisation”. So I guess one brings that, to decide: ”how can I use this report?”. ”How can I use this material”? Does it really say anything [relevant] or not?”
3.2. Hard Data Produced within the Municipal Sphere
- Well, in all single issues, we [the Traffic Office] can do measurements, when we use vibrations. We make a pre-and after measurement and we’ll know [if the mitigation worked]. Noise is harder to measure [than air pollution], but then we’ll for example measure the sound absorption of windows, and a new window is put there, and we know it became less noisy. So, in single cases, it can be done.
- When it comes to the more… what should I call it? [general goals] Like for example ”municipal [public transportation] commuting must increase at the cost of private car traffic”–things like that are not easy [to measure], as it [changes] happens over a row of many years. In those cases, one can measure traffic, to know if it actually changed. Or the fact that we have to apply the Plan for Traffic and Mobility in our everyday work – it’s not an easy thing to measure. Or when we have to do campaigns to influence the behaviour of our citizens […] But then there’s the greater noise picture, actually a mapping done every five years. It’s supposed to give us a picture of how our work is going in the right or the wrong direction.
- I had to work harder getting good grades in science, with mathematics and that kind of subjects. And this is what I’ve worked with a lot […]. A lot of emission estimations and statistics and development of methods, not only qualitatively but also quantitively. So it’s been a journey, and eventually, one lands in some kind of ”hard”… – well, it is difficult, this is a ”hard fact” sector.
- We have [been discussing and applying results] in dialogue with the politicians, the best research results […] like “it is the traffic in the streets of Malmö city that causes the premature deaths of 90–100 persons per year”. That type of results, they are the best arguments. It is [pivotal] that we get access to all these results, and that they are unambiguous. Because there are so many results, ready. We don’t have the time to measure them. And cost calculations are also great, they are in the TROMP [a municipal traffic plan] – if Malmö will keep growing, how should the car fleet look then, so that we don’t burden Malmö more?
- Mostly from the municipal planning and construction atlas, where one can see all ongoing detail plans and one can check noise levels and air quality and many other factors.- What numbers and data is it [the atlas] based on, do you know that?- Well, it can differ. The noise maps are from the environmental mapping that we perform every five years, and air [quality] must come from here, from my colleagues [in the Environmental Office]. I don’t know how often they update it. And the other layers… I have a colleague who works on GIS where there is a common map for everything.
3.3. Administrative Pipelines and Urban Planning
- How do we cooperate around air quality and noise issues? We try to make them merge. When I got this position, it was put in the same job – it wasn’t like that before – earlier there was one person [on noise and one on pollution]. So, this [assigning both issues to one person] is a way to go. Earlier, there was a Traffic Environment Programme, where they have tried to make them merge. It’s not running anymore. […] The research on air quality and noise also seem very separated, there’s very little joint research. […] If we want to mitigate at a preschool or a school – well, traffic really is the primary source of noise and pollution…
- But I find myself in a situation where I try - this turns almost existential, but I try to re-evaluate things - I imagine that when I listen more with my heart and my gut-feeling, I actually miss the softer sides of my profession. Actually, I try to change that.
- Do you apply a more holistic perspective or rather look at the details?- A more holistic perspective. When I get positive feedback, I often hear I’m good at looking at the whole picture […] I don’t think I’ve adapted as much as I’ve kept to my point of departure, but then I’ve had good use of my education, where I worked in transdisciplinary aspects of system analysis.
- Yes, when it comes to Malmö, it [the traffic] is one of the biggest challenges, and then densification. When it comes to traffic, it might turn out well, but it can also be bad. For the air.
3.4. Everyday Chores/Mill: Routine, Project Administration, and Loss of Organisational Memory
- Something quite problematic in municipal activity is this… lack of re-introduction of already established knowledge [återföringen av kunskap]. Sometimes, one might search for something, and you find, just by accident, that this case was investigated ten years ago, too, and there is this and that report on it, so…
3.5. When Facing the Unknown: Internet and Networks
- But what I use scientific results for…, it’s to improve the level of knowledge, motivating why we should do this and that, and why we should spend money on it, why should we build a noise wall here, instead of there, and so on.
- If I need information, it is most often in a hurry. I Google, look at homepages I know of, often related to traffic issues or environmental issues.- If you are to start up a new project, and need to find information, how do you go along?- Well, I Google, I guess.- Sometimes, I have the time [to do research] – well I guess I start with Googling! And then one sees if something interesting comes up, it might be a study of some kind, and then we can contact those who are responsible.
- Then there are a lot of [personal] contacts. You know something [comparable work] is going on somewhere…- What could that be?- Then you’d call them, like ”You did that, how did it go?” ”Is there anything to share, do you have any report ready?” and often there is, so you can use your network. So networks and the Internet, that’s probably the primary [method of information collection]. […] So I feel it’s the kind of information that’s available, what you find, apparently, but… the scientific [quality] gets kind of lost. I do have contacts at the Lund Technical University and Malmö University, but I rarely use them to find information.- Sometimes, I have contacted colleagues in the environmental offices in Stockholm and Gothenburg. We know each other, vi meet once a year, the people working with urban planning at the environmental offices, and [I would] ask if they know of something. There we have a little network where we exchange information.
- I sometimes wonder: Where is the line between official reports and research? Because I don’t really know where to draw the line – what is a report and what is research? […] What I consider research, well I’d look more at where they [the papers] come from, if they are from the WHO or from some medical study, or from the Swedish Work Environment Authority. And if there’s some kind of problem description. And then there are innumerable reports, but they are from other sources, maybe The Swedish Transport Administration or other municipalities. They might come from Chalmer’s [University of Technology] or larger projects, so that would be some kind of research, where they try to find solutions and measurements. But there are very few direct solutions, you know ”do this and you’ll solve it”.
3.6. “I Don’t Take the Time” and ”It Is Not Available”: Obstacles for Access to and Use of Scientific Information
- No, we can’t find [research] – and it’s a big loss, as I see it, something I miss, while I also see that I seldom have had the space, the possibility, time-wise, to do it or I don’t take the time. It might have to do with how you work. […] It has to be quick and good, i.e. you do it as well as possible but as quickly as possible. I which there was more time.
- Yes, I agree. Information does come [to our knowledge] but it is not regular or systematic or anything.- And you don’t have access to search engines and [scientific] publications?- I don’t even know that. It’s nothing that I have tried, anyways.
- Well yes, informally there are people, rather than homepages. If I get into real trouble and can’t find anything, there are a few people I can think of, whom I know to be very knowledgeable. They also have that research perspective and a somehow deeper contact [with academia]. So, it’s more personal contacts, experts […]. Which I find to be very rare. There are too few connections, so to say, between real life and the academia. Which is fairly obvious.
3.7. The Luxury of Reading and Shrinking Time
- Well, I think […] that there is way too little time for that [reading], generally talking, and that I wish there was more time, and more acceptance from my own side to really just sit down and peacefully process information, which is something I very seldom indulge in.
- Yes, administration has increased and it might make the office less efficient when you are more people. Maybe it’s what happens when there are more people working parallel with the same thing, there is always this risk when you grow to big [numerous]. But if you look at the number of sick-leaves, too high work load… well it has grown.- Do you have any idea how that might be?- Well, I think […] there is so much information. Everything is available. And… one has a freer role today than before. So there are more possibilities, so if you are supposed to attend more seminars and lectures, and other chores arrive [at your desk], a lot of formal requests come in with a short window to answer, and we produce all these action plans that have to be handled politically – it always takes more time than one might think.
4. Conclusions: Knowledge Access Practices and Obstacles to Research Translation
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lisberg Jensen, E.; Westerberg, K.; Malmqvist, E.; Oudin, A. Through Internet and Friends: Translation of Air Pollution Research in Malmö Municipality, Sweden. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 4214. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124214
Lisberg Jensen E, Westerberg K, Malmqvist E, Oudin A. Through Internet and Friends: Translation of Air Pollution Research in Malmö Municipality, Sweden. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(12):4214. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124214
Chicago/Turabian StyleLisberg Jensen, Ebba, Karin Westerberg, Ebba Malmqvist, and Anna Oudin. 2020. "Through Internet and Friends: Translation of Air Pollution Research in Malmö Municipality, Sweden" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 12: 4214. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124214
APA StyleLisberg Jensen, E., Westerberg, K., Malmqvist, E., & Oudin, A. (2020). Through Internet and Friends: Translation of Air Pollution Research in Malmö Municipality, Sweden. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(12), 4214. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124214