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Jennifer L. Kent
Pág. 271 - 293
Ongoing advances in technologies of connectivity have strengthened our capacity to envision urban environments less dominated by private car use. Yet many cities remain attached to, and defined by, the automobile. In challenging this status quo, we must ...
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Courtney Babb, Sam McLeod, Conor Noone
Pág. 249 - 270
Despite a broad consensus that cycling can address a range of transportation issues, many countries have struggled to institute measures to increase cycling participation. Even for cities that have achieved marked progress, there remains a gap in making ...
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Eva Van Eenoo, Koos Fransen, Kobe Boussauw
Pág. 117?136
In June 2019, the government of the Flemish Region (Belgium) launched the ?mobility score,? a standardized built environment indicator that informs citizens in Flanders about the walking or cycling accessibility from their dwelling to a range of basic am...
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Erick Guerra
Pág. 165?182
As local, state, and federal agencies began investing substantial resources into subsidizing transit in the 1960s and ?70s, public documents argued that transit agencies should focus on attracting choice riders instead of dependent riders, who have no al...
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Festival Godwin Boateng, Jacqueline M. Klopp
Pág. 651 - 670
African countries serve as used vehicle dumping sites for advanced capitalist countries, undermining global and local goals to move toward safe and low-emissions transport. Africa?s used vehicle dependency is commonly explained in terms of push-pull fact...
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Sheila Convery and Brendan Williams
Despite rapid changes in vehicle technology and the expansion of IT-based mobility solutions, travel habits must be changed to address the environmental and health implications of increasing car dependency. A significant amount of research focuses on com...
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Mike Hynes, Olga Bolbocean, Michael McNally, Mike Conroy, Daniel Bednarczuk, Fiona Hyland, Emer Coyne and Cat Marie
Public transport transforms urban communities and the lives of citizens living in them by stimulating economic growth, promoting sustainable lifestyles and providing a greater quality of life. Globally, the healthiest cities have one thing in common, a p...
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Mike Hynes
More people than ever before are living in urban settlements, increasing competition for living space, employment, food, water, and energy. Urbanisation poses many challenges, most notably meeting the basic health and well-being needs of inhabitants. One...
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Ashley Hayden, Miles Tight, Michael Burrow
Pág. 3944 - 3956
Most urban environments appear to marginalise alternative forms of transport e.g. walking or cycling. New planning strategies are required to promote a reduction in car use and low carbon travel. This paper aims to inform sustainable transport planning s...
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Kazuki Terayama, Michiyasu Odani
Pág. 4258 - 4269
This study aims to examine an expected role of public transportation services in suburban housing development areas of Kobe City in Japan, through calculation of accessibility to the city center using a utility-based measure. The calculation results sugg...
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