0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R500 - R1,000 (1)
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments

Megacity Mobility - Integrated Urban Transportation Development and Management (Hardcover): Zongzhi Li, Adrian T. Moore, Samuel... Megacity Mobility - Integrated Urban Transportation Development and Management (Hardcover)
Zongzhi Li, Adrian T. Moore, Samuel R. Staley
R2,981 Discovery Miles 29 810 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

World population growth and economic prosperity have given rise to ever-increasing demands on cities, transportation planning, and goods movement. This growth, coupled with a slower pace of transportation capacity expansion and deteriorated facility restoration, has led to rapid changes in the transportation planning and policy environment. These stresses are particularly acute for megacities where degradation of mobility and facility performance have reached alarming rates. Addressing these transportation challenges requires innovative solutions. Megacity Mobility grapples with these challenges by addressing transportation policy, planning, and facilities in a multimodal context. It discusses innovative short- and long-term solutions for meeting current and future mobility needs for the world's most dynamic cities by addressing the influence of urban land use on mobility, 3D spiderweb transportation planning, travel demand management, multimodal transportation with flexible capacity, efficient capacity utilization driven by new technologies, innovative transportation funding and financing, and performance-based budget allocation using asset management principles. It discusses emerging issues, highlights potential challenges affecting proposed solutions, and provides policymakers, planners, and transportation professionals a road map to achieving sustainable mobility in the 21st century. Zongzhi Li is a professor and the director of the Sustainable Transportation and Infrastructure Research (STAIR) Center at Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT). Adrian T. Moore is vice president of policy at Reason Foundation in Washington, D.C., with focuses on privatization, transportation and urban growth, and more. Samuel R. Staley is the director of the DeVoe L. Moore Center in the College of Social Sciences and Public Policy at Florida State University.

Curb Rights - A Foundation for Free Enterprise in Urban Transit (Paperback): Daniel B. Klein, Adrian T. Moore, Binyam Reja Curb Rights - A Foundation for Free Enterprise in Urban Transit (Paperback)
Daniel B. Klein, Adrian T. Moore, Binyam Reja
R792 Discovery Miles 7 920 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Transit services in the United States are in trouble. Ridership has dwindled, productivity has declined, and operating deficits have widened. The traditional approaches to running transit systems--government planning or operation of bus and rail services, government subsidization of private operations, heavy regulation of all transit modes--have failed, and there is little hope of their ever succeeding under current practices. But public transportation cannot simply be abandoned. Can it, then, be made more self-supporting and efficient? The authors of this book say it's time to rethink the fundamental structure of transit policy. The book focuses on street-based transit--buses, shuttles, and jitneys. (While street-based transit in the U.S. today usually means bus service, in other times and places streets have also been served by smaller vehicles called jitneys that follow a route but not a schedule.) The authors examine a variety of transit services: jitney services from America's past, illegal jitneys today, airport shuttle van services, bus deregulation in Great Britain, and jitney services in less developed countries. The authors propose that urban transit be brought into the fold of market activity by establishing property rights not only in vehicles, but also in curb zones and transit stops. Market competition and entrepreneurship would depend on a foundation of what they call " curb rights." By creating exclusive and transferable curb rights (to bus stops and other pickup points) leased by auction, the authors contend that American cities can have the best of both kinds of markets--scheduled (and unsubsidized) bus service and unscheduled but faster and more flexiblejitneys. They maintain that a carefully planned transit system based on property rights would rid the transit market of inefficient government production and overregulation. It would also avoid the problems of a lawless market--cutthroat competition, schedule jockeying, and even curbside conflict among rival operators. Entrepreneurs would be able to introduce ever better service, revise schedules and route structures, establish connections among transit providers, and use new pricing strategies. And travelers would find public transit more attractive than they do now. Once the system of curb rights is sensibly implemented, the authors conclude, the market process will take over. Then the invisible hand can do in transit what it does so well in other parts of the economy.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Bostik Prestik (50g)
R22 Discovery Miles 220
Harry Potter Wizard Wand - In…
 (3)
R800 Discovery Miles 8 000
Professor Snape Wizard Wand - In…
 (8)
R801 Discovery Miles 8 010
Tommee Tippee - Closer to Nature Soother…
R170 R158 Discovery Miles 1 580
Wagworld Pet Blankie (Blue) - X Large…
R309 R246 Discovery Miles 2 460
Pure Pleasure Electric Heating Pad (30 x…
 (2)
R599 R529 Discovery Miles 5 290
Moto-Quip Short Aluminium Handled…
R69 Discovery Miles 690
Bostik Sew Simple (25ml)
R31 Discovery Miles 310
Pineware Steam, Spray, Dry Iron (1400W)
R247 Discovery Miles 2 470
King Of Pride - Kings Of Sin: Book 2
Ana Huang Paperback R280 R140 Discovery Miles 1 400

 

Partners