Contents:
PART I AN INTRODUCTION TO TRANSPORT AND DEVELOPMENT
1. The Transport and Development Relationship
Robin Hickman, Moshe Givoni, David Bonilla and David Banister
PART II URBAN STRUCTURE AND TRAVEL
2. Urban Structure and Travel
Philip Stoker, Susan Petheram and Reid Ewing
3. Urban Passenger Transport Energy Consumption and Carbon Dioxide
Emissions: A Global Review and Assessment of Some Reduction
Strategies
Peter Newman and Jeff Kenworthy
4. Homes, Jobs and Commuting: Development Location and Travel
Outcomes
Peter Headicar
5. New Household Location and the Commute to Work: Changes over
Time
Robin Hickman and David Banister
6. Spatial Structure and Travel: Trends in Commuting and
Non-commuting Travels in US Metropolitan Areas
Peter Gordon and Bumsoo Lee
7. New Urbanism and Travel
Marcial Echenique and Alastair Donald
8. Residential Location and Travel: Hangzhou and Copenhagen
Compared to Studies in Cities Worldwide
Petter Naess
9. Public Transport-Orientated Development and Network Effects
Carey Curtis
10. The Effects of Neighbourhood Type and Self-Selection on
Driving: A Case Study of Northern California
Xinyu (Jason) Cao
11. The Role of Attitudes in Accounting for Self-Selection
Effects
Bert Van Wee and Patricia Mokhtarian
12. How Stable are Preferences for Neighbourhood Type and Design in
Residential Moves?
Kevin J. Krizek, Ahmed El-Geneidy and Ryan Wilson
13. Community Design and Active Travel
Susan Handy
14. Street Networks
Wesley Marshall, Norman Garrick and Stephen Marshall
PART III TRANSPORT AND SPATIAL IMPACTS
15. Transport and Urban Development
Piet Rietveld and Frank Bruinsma
16. Methods for Estimating the Economic Impact of Transportation
Improvements: An Interpretive Review
Michael Iacono and David Levinson
17. Transport Projects and Wider Economic Impacts
Torben Holvad and Steen Leleur
18. Urban Freight: Freight Strategy, Transport Movements and the
Urban Spatial Economy
David A. Hensher and Zheng Li
19. Spatial Implications of Public Transport Investments in
Metropolitan Areas: Some Empirical Evidence Regarding Light Rail
and Bus Rapid Transport
Eran Feitelson and Orit Rotem-Mindali
20. High-Speed Trains and Spatial-Economic Impacts. A
British-French Comparison on Two Scales: Intra- and
Inter-Regional
Chia-Lin Chen and Peter Hall
21. Assessing the Wider Impacts of the Jubilee Line Extension in
East London
Peter Jones
22. The Developmental Impacts of the Madrid Metro Line 12 on Retail
Activities Around Stations
Lucia Mejia Dorantes
23. Bus Rapid Transit and Buses with High Levels of Service: A
Global Overview
Dario Hidalgo and Juan Carlos Muñoz
24. The Expansion of Large International Hub Airports
Andrew R. Goetz
25. Decision Making and Major Transport Infrastructure Projects:
The Role of Project Ownership
Chantal C. Cantarelli and Bent Flyvbjerg
26. Road Pricing, Impacts and Cost Effectiveness
Jan Anne Annema
27. Incomes, Accessibility and Transport Poverty
Gordon Stokes
28. Development and Social Policy: The Role of Transport in Social
Development, in the UK Context
Susan Kenyon
29. The Car in the Neighbourhood: Residential Design and Social
Outcomes in Southern Germany
Iqbal Hamiduddin
30. Accessibility: Theory and Practice in the Netherlands and
UK
Karst Geurs and Derek Halden
PART IV WIDER DIMENSIONS IN TRANSPORT AND DEVELOPMENT
31. More Than A to B: Cultures of Mobilities and Travel
Ole B. Jensen
32. Car Fixation, Socialization and Opportunities for Change
Ellen Matthies and Christian A. Klöckner
33. Telecommunications and Travel
Galit Cohen-Blankshtain
34. E-Retailing, The Network Society and Travel
Orit Rotem-Mindali
35. Parents, Children and Automobility: Trends, Challenges and
Opportunities
Robyn Dowling
36. Old Age and the Importance of the Car in Maintaining Activity
Patterns in Scandinavia
Randi Hjorthol and Susanne Nordbakke
37. Ageing Populations and Travel
Gamze Dane, Anna Grigolon, Soora Rasouli, Harry Timmermans and
Dujuan Yang
38. Investigating Urban Oil Vulnerability
Jago Dodson, Neil Sipe and Terry Li
39. Troublesome Leisure Travel: Counterproductive Sustainable
Transport Policies
Erling Holden and Kristin Linnerud
40. The Future of Transport and Development in the New Millennium:
The Inescapable Implications of Climate Change
Mayer Hillman
41. The Value of Transition Management for Sustainable
Transport
Harry Geerlings and Flor Avelino
42. The Regional Tram-Train of Kassel, Germany: How Regional
Responsibility Leads to Local Success
Helmut Holzapfel and Rainer Meyfahrt
43. The Making of European Transport Policy
Dominic Stead
44. Understanding Process. Can Transport Research Come to Terms
with Temporality?
Tim Schwanen
PART V SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
45. Transport and Development – What Next?
David Banister, David Bonilla, Moshe Givoni and Robin Hickman
Index
Edited by Robin Hickman, Bartlett School of Planning, University College London, UK, the late Moshe Givoni, formerly Transport Research Unit, Department of Geography and the Human Environment, Tel-Aviv University, Israel, David Bonilla, Research Professor, Institute of Economic Research, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico (UNAM) and David Banister, Emeritus Professor of Transport Studies, School of Geography and the Environment and Senior Research Fellow, St Anne's College, University of Oxford, UK
‘This Handbook is an excellent reference for practice and research
in
*transport and development. The reviewer wishes to recommend it
strongly for both academic research and professional practice in
infrastructure project management.’– Zhen Chen, Management,
Procurement and Law*
‘This timely compendium offers some of the best, up-to-date
knowledge on how transport and development, richly defined, jointly
shape each other. Written by some of the most authoritative voices
in the field and encyclopedic in its coverage, the Handbook on
Transport and Development brings together fresh, grounded insights
from across the globe, at multiple geographic scales, and for
everything from bikeways to fast inter-city trains. It is a
wonderful reference and must-have library addition to anyone who
cares about charting sustainable urban, regional, and mobility
futures.’
*Robert Cervero, University of California, Berkeley, US*
‘For more than a century cities have been urged to integrate the
two fields of urban planning and transport planning. But too often
these professional fields have evolved in their own institutional
silos. Now they are beginning to grow together again in a new joint
practice. This book will be a foundational text for the real
practice of transport and urban development planning. It contains
contributions from all the principal scholars in the field, and
examines all the main issues and fields of inquiry. It does fine
justice to the legacy of Professors Sir Peter Hall and Piet
Rietveld. To practitioners and researchers I say, “Have this book
to hand on your shelf”.’
*Nicholas Low, University of Melbourne, Australia*
‘The role of transport in the development of cities and regions is
a topic of immense importance. The editors have brought together
authors from all over the world with experience of the methods
needed to assess the impact of transport and analysis of the
evidence of a varied range of projects. The result is a genuine
Handbook of the state of the art, but with clear insights into
future problems. It is highly recommended reading for researchers,
policy makers and politicians.’
*Roger Vickerman, University of Kent, UK*
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