scholarly journals Evaluation of Urban Public Transport: A Case Study of Yarmouk University

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 8-17
Author(s):  
  Ahmad H. Alomari ◽  
Malek H. Aldalalah ◽  
Majd Al-Deen M. Al-Dalaika ◽  
Ghaida K. Sawae ◽  
Shaima K. Sawae ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 43 ◽  
pp. 357-365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiuxia Zhang ◽  
Qingnian Zhang ◽  
Tingting Sun ◽  
Yongchao Zou ◽  
Huanwan Chen

2021 ◽  
Vol 279 ◽  
pp. 123807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcin Wołek ◽  
Michał Wolański ◽  
Mikołaj Bartłomiejczyk ◽  
Olgierd Wyszomirski ◽  
Krzysztof Grzelec ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Smart Dumba

Background: Literature on the negative socio-economic and environmental externalities generated by informal public transport (IPT) in developing countries is vast, vibrant and growing fast. These externalities include but are not limited to noise, air and land pollution, accidents and, more importantly, a source of congestion (human and vehicular) because of poor driver behaviour. In this article, the research does not seek to reinstate these, but rather, it argues that poor driver behaviour is a dependent variable to some regulatory policy stimuli. Yet, an extensive literature survey has shown that the driver behaviour and urban transport regulation linkage remain little explored.Objective: The purpose of this article was to unpack the relationship between informal public transport driver behaviour and the prevailing regulatory framework.Method: Based on a case study of Harare, Zimbabwe, the researcher adopted a mixed-methods paradigm and interrogated the prevailing urban public transport regulatory regimes and applied professional judgement, oral interviews backed by some quantitative data and relate these to obtaining IPT driver behavioural characteristics.Results: Poor driver behaviour exhibited by IPT were generated, exacerbated and or eased by the prevailing regulatory policy. This is well depicted through an IPT driver behaviour and regulation loop reinforcing diagram.Conclusion: Following this argument, the article cautions policy makers and urban managers alike that direct approaches and interventions when trying to regulate IPT poor driver behaviour and its secondary negative effects will be futile as long as the regulatory policy remains the same. Failure to recognise and connect the dots between IPT driver behaviour and policy partly explains why globally, the IPT sector has proved difficult in prohibiting, restructuring or even formalising it.


2014 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gordana Štefančić ◽  
Slavko Šarić ◽  
Robert Spudić

Investment in the transport system with the aim of fostering attractiveness and land use in urban structures is of great interest for planners and investors. Investment in urban public transport would especially contribute to revitalising distinct city areas. The samples of high population density and diversified area use are organised around accessible means of urban public transport.The main objective of this case study was to find an adequate model for the solution of urban public transport on the location Novi Jelkovec in Zagreb after the construction of a new urban settlement, with the aim to revitalise the peripheral parts of the city. The theoretical assumption on the influence of better organised transport on land use is hereby researched through the example of correction of timetables and reduction of travelling time between nodes on the line in the Novi Jelkovec settlement. In preparing this paper the following methods were used: analysis and synthesis, mathematical and statistical methods, methods of interviewing. The theory of correlation of land use and urban public transport is based on models that develop the “compact city”. The obtained research results confirm the significance of the correlation between urban land use and urban public transport. It can be concluded that this paper proves the influence of the correlation between land use and urban public transport on the concrete example of Novi Jelkovec. Its implementation could result in solving the concrete traffic problem and along with it a faster urbanisation of the new settlement.


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