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Books > Business & Economics > Industry & industrial studies > Transport industries
'This very interesting book explores the issues and approaches that
society must take to shift to lower carbon usage in transportation.
. . Each expert contributor provides excellent insight into the
various facets of contemporary mobility systems and transportation
practices to help the reader understand the complexities of
transportation and related environmental concerns. Topics include
urbanization and transportation in urban areas travel patterns,
accessibility to transportation, and financial aspects.' - W.J.
Sproule, Choice 'In their new book, Moving Towards Low Carbon
Mobility, Moshe Givoni and David Banister have succeeded in doing
what few edited volumes achieve. They have put together a set of
chapters by international experts on a range of topics that link
together tightly as a coherent whole.' - Michael Kuby, Journal of
Transport Geography 'For a thorough and thoughtful perspective on
what it will take to de-carbonize cities of the future, this book
is a must-read. Technology alone, we are told, will not create the
post-carbon city. As important is coming to grips with a complex
web of cultural, institutional, financial, and social factors that
powerfully shape mobility choices, now and in the future. A
balanced, holistic approach that reveals how the many elements of
contemporary transport systems work together offers the best hope
for achieving more sustainable, less carbon-intensive mobility
futures.' - Robert Cervero, University of California, Berkeley, US
The transport sector has been singularly unsuccessful in becoming
low carbon and less resource intensive. This book takes an
innovative and holistic social, cultural and behavioural
perspective, as well as covering the more conventional economic and
technological dimensions, to provide a more complete understanding
of the mobility and transport system and its progress towards high
carbon mobility. The book uses this platform to explore the means
to achieve low carbon mobility through outlining alternative
pathways, through an investigation of theories of change, and
through alternative visions of the low carbon transport city. The
book's core message is that the complexity of the mobility and
transport system should not encourage inaction, but strong and
immediate action. In addition to implementing a wide range of
policy measures, the book argues for a fundamental change in
'thinking' when it comes to transport policy, governance and
analysis approaches, before low carbon mobility becomes a reality.
Bringing together the latest thinking on transport, mobility and
the environment, this book will appeal to researchers and students
interested in sustainability issues and sustainable transport and
transport related areas in particular, including policy makers as
well as a more general professional audience. Contributors include:
N. Akyelken, M. Al-Chalabi, D. Banister, E. Beyazit, J. Bishop, M.
Givoni, R. Hickman, J. Liu, J. Macmillen, J. Markovitch, A. Neves,
T. Schwanen, M. Tran
The advancements in decision sciences theory and applications can
be regarded as a continuously emerging field in all areas of
interest including technology, industry, energy, healthcare,
education, agriculture, social sciences, and more. Managers in all
disciplines face an endless list of complex issues every day. One
of the essential managerial skills is the ability to allocate and
utilize limited resources appropriately in the efforts of achieving
optimal performance efficiently. This is no less important for
those who work in the transportation sector. Decision Sciences and
Applications in the Transportation Sector explores the importance
of decision sciences and the ways in which they apply to the
transportation sector. This book covers technologies and tools
including machine learning, mathematical modeling, and simulation
and their applications in such tasks as reducing fuel costs,
improving passenger flow, and ensuring vehicle safety. It is an
essential reference source for managers, professionals in the
transport industry, supply chain specialists, safety officers, IT
consultants, executives, practitioners, scientists, students,
researchers, and academicians.
"Exploiting the Sea" offers new perspectives on Britain's vital but
changing relationship with the sea since the late nineteenth
century. It assesses the significance to the British economy of
sea-reliant industries such as shipping, shipbuilding, fishing,
coastal trading and seaside tourism. It also seeks to explain why
the clear pre-eminence that Britain established in the maritime
world during the Victorian era has not been sustained in the
twentieth century. "Exploiting the Sea" is a new volume in the
highly successful EXETER MARITIME STUDIES series, and brings
together contributions from experts writing in their own specialist
fields to give a wide-ranging but structured analytical approach to
a misunderstood subject.
Better urban transport systems and the need for a healthier
environment are continuous requirements that create a fertile
atmosphere for original ideas, innovative approaches and
applications of advanced technologies, their tests and evaluations
in practice. Moreover, there is a growing need for integration with
IT systems and applications to improve safety and efficiency.
Meanwhile, the substantial growth of maritime shipping has resulted
in large transported quantities around the world, creating a demand
for innovative solutions for ports and fleets. The apparently
parallel topics of Urban Transport and Maritime Transport meet in
the transport and environmental management of coastal cities, both
being affected positively and negatively by landslide and seaside
traffic. Maritime Transport is highly interconnected with rail,
road and air services, as well as inland waterways. Each of these
must therefore operate complimentary of one another to maximise
efficiency and respond rapidly to variable economic and political
contingencies. The variety of topics covered in this volume
reflects the complex interaction of transport systems with their
environment and the need to establish integrated strategies. The
goal is to arrive at optimal socio-economic solutions while
reducing the negative environmental impacts of transportation
systems typically by interdisciplinary approaches.
The impact of transport on the global environment is an issue
attracting world-wide attention in the 1990s. This important book
sheds new light on the environmental costs of transport. It
discusses all modes of transport and their effects of major
problems such as greenhouse gases, depletion of non-renewable
resources, urban sprawl, acid rain, oil spillage etc. Drawing on
the most recent research in environmental economics, it discusses
problems of regulation and the implications for economic policy.
This genuinely international and comparative book will be essential
reading for economists, transport planners, policymakers and
environmental scientists.
Trust is increasingly recognized as a crucial aspect of successful
economic relationships, albeit a difficult one to define, and Mark
Casson has been at the forefront of recent research in this
area.Mark Casson pioneered the use of transaction cost theory to
explain the boundaries of the multinational firm. In The
Organization of International Business, he extends the
internalization theory of the firm to encompass, on the one hand,
inter-firm networking and, on the other, the internal organization
and managerial structure of the firm. The key innovation is the
distinction between information cost - the cost of gathering
information on the assumption that it is true - and transaction
cost - the cost of ensuring that the information actually is true.
This innovation facilitates a synthesis of transaction cost
analysis and organizational behaviour. It also provides new
insights into the dynamics of internationalization, and the role of
learning in the growth of the firm. The Organization of
International Business is a major extension of international
business theory which synthesizes transaction cost analysis and
organizational behaviour. Although it focuses on international
business and multinational enterprises, the analysis can be applied
to a wide variety of business units. Together with its companion
volume, Entrepreneurship and Business Culture, this topical and
wide-ranging book offers a definitive analysis of the importance of
trust in economic life as well as the related concepts of
networking, consultation and empowerment.
Indonesia is the world's largest archipelagic state, with more than
18,000 islands and over 7.9 million square kilometres of sea. The
marine frontier presents the nation with both economic
opportunities and political and strategic challenges. Indonesia has
been affected more than most countries in the world by a slow
revolution in the management of its waters. Whereas Indonesia's
seas were once conceived administratively as little more than the
empty space between islands, successive governments have become
aware that this view is outmoded. The effective transfer to the
seas of regulatory regimes that took shape on land, such as
territoriality, has been an enduring challenge to Indonesian
governments. This book addresses issues related to maritime
boundaries and security, marine safety, inter-island shipping, the
development of the archipelagic concept in international law,
marine conservation, illegal fishing, and the place of the sea in
national and regional identity.
This examination of transport economics brings alive economic
theories for students, elucidating traditional concepts by applying
them to a real world context. It examines the microeconomic
concepts that underpin this sector and the implications for
transport markets with real examples from across the EU. Also
available is a companion website with extra features to accompany
the text, please take a look by clicking below -
http://www.palgrave.com/economics/transport/Home.aspx
This research review discusses the most significant papers to have
been published over the past fifteen years on the use of Global
Positioning System (GPS) devices to measure person and vehicle
travel. The carefully selected papers track developments in the use
of GPS devices to record travel and document some of the latest
applications in which GPS is starting to replace conventional
self-report surveys.
Containing research from the 25th edition of the Urban Transport
conference, the papers included in this book address the need to
solve important pollution problems associated with urban transport.
There is also a growing need for integration with
telecommunications systems and IT applications in order to improve
safety, security and efficiency. The need for better urban
transport systems and for a healthier environment has resulted in a
wide range of research originating from many different countries.
These studies highlight the importance of innovative systems, new
approaches and original ideas, which need to be thoroughly tested
and critically evaluated before they can be implemented in
practice. The variety of topics covered in this volume reflects the
complex interaction of the urban transport systems with their
environment and the need to establish integrated strategies. The
aim is to arrive at optimal socio-economic solutions while reducing
the negative environmental impacts of current transportation
systems.
Perhaps no other industrial technology changed the course of
Mexican history in the United States--and Mexico--than did the
coming of the railroads. Tens of thousands of Mexicans worked for
the railroads in the United States, especially in the Southwest and
Midwest. Construction crews soon became railroad workers proper,
along with maintenance crews later. Extensive Mexican American
settlements appeared throughout the lower and upper Midwest as the
result of the railroad. The substantial Mexican American
populations in these regions today are largely attributable to
19th- and 20th-century railroad work. Only agricultural work
surpassed railroad work in terms of employment of Mexicans.
The full history of Mexican American railroad labor and
settlement in the United States had not been told, however, until
Jeffrey Marcos Garcilazo's groundbreaking research in "Traqueros."
Garcilazo mined numerous archives and other sources to provide the
first and only comprehensive history of Mexican railroad workers
across the United States, with particular attention to the Midwest.
He first explores the origins and process of Mexican labor
recruitment and immigration and then describes the areas of work
performed. He reconstructs the workers' daily lives and explores
not only what the workers did on the job but also what they did at
home and how they accommodated and/or resisted Americanization.
Boxcar communities, strike organizations, and "traquero culture"
finally receive historical acknowledgment. Integral to his study is
the importance of family settlement in shaping working class
communities and consciousness throughout the Midwest.
Because of Germany's strong reputation in naval construction,
the Allies slated the shipbuilding industry for dismantling after
1945; however, by 1955, West German shipbuilders had regained their
place among the world leaders in this industry. This study traces
the reconstruction through the labyrinth of Cold War diplomacy,
foreign aid programs, and West German politics. By linking the
histories of U.S. foreign policy, German business, and postwar
Americanization, Wend demonstrates not just the impact of U.S.
policy on West German reconstruction, but also the influence of
local actors on the direction, implementation, and success of U.S.
policies.
The recovery of German shipbuilding meshed well with most of the
Truman administration's critical foreign policy initiatives,
including the Marshall Plan. As American commitments became
globalized, the U.S. relied heavily on West German actors and their
institutions for the successful implementation of its policies. In
shipbuilding, this reliance strengthened the role of the industrial
association, the vertical integration of shipyards with Ruhr
industries, and awakened opposition of British and American
interest groups. Although U.S. policies failed to alter this
industry's structure, West Germans did accept the American
production model in the reconfiguration of individual shipyards in
the 1950s.
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