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Bus Transport: Demand, Economics, Contracting, and Policy

Autor David A. Hensher
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 apr 2020
Bus Transport: Demand, Economics, Contracting, and Policy examines in one source the most critical and current research themes of public transport relevant to regulators, planners, operators, researchers and educators. It highlights the wider economic impacts of public transport and compares energy usage across all public transport modes. The book examines the evolving debate on Mobility as a Service (MaaS) and includes discussion of such themes as; public image issues, performance measurement and monitoring, contract procurement and design models, travel choice and demand, and global public transport reform. The book reflects the leading perspectives on the preservation and health of the bus sector, intending to move public transport reform forward.


  • Compiles in one source up-to-date insights on important public transport themes, issues, and debates
  • Examines a wide range of public transport topics in the multidisciplinary fields of economics, policy, operations, and planning
  • Bridges the gap between scientific research and policy implementation
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780128201329
ISBN-10: 0128201320
Pagini: 526
Dimensiuni: 216 x 276 mm
Greutate: 1.21 kg
Editura: ELSEVIER SCIENCE

Public țintă

Public Transportation researchers, scholars, planners, consultants, policy-makers

Cuprins

1. Introduction and Overview
Part I: Reviews2. Public service contracts in the bus sector3. Disruptive technology and moving people4. The influence of the Thredbo Series5. Competition and ownership in land passenger transport: the Thredbo story
Part II: Contracting6. Contracting regimes for bus services: what have we learnt in recent years?7. Incompleteness and clarity in bus contracts8. A simplified performance-linked value for money model for bus contract payments9. Bus contract costs, user perceived service quality and performance assessment10. Customer service quality and benchmarking in bus contracts11. Are there cost efficiency gains through competitive tendering or negotiated performance-based contracts and benchmarking in the absence of an incumbent public monopolist?12. Efficient contracting and incentive agreements between regulators and bus operators: the influence of risk preferences of contracting agents on contract choice13. Using contracted assets to undertake non-contracted services to improve cost efficiency 14. Disruption costs in contract transitions
Part III: Bus Rapid Transit15. Sustainable bus systems: moving towards a value for money and network-based approach and away from blind commitment16. Ridership drivers of bus based transit systems17. Performance contributors of bus rapid transit systems within the ITDP BRT standard18. Review of bus rapid transit and branded bus services in Australia
Part IV: Image19. Identifying resident preferences for bus and rail investments20. Cultural contrasts of preferences for bus rapid transit and light rail transit
Part V: Elasticities21. Assessing sources of variation in public transport elasticities: some warnings
Part VI: Crowding22. A review of willingness to pay evidence on public transport crowding23. A review of objective and subjective measures of crowding in public transport24. The effects of passenger crowding on public transport demand and supply system25. Multimodal transport pricing with extensions to non-motorised transport
Part VII: Transport Appraisal26. Estimating the wider economic benefits of the Sydney North West Rail Link project27. Clarifying the complementary contributions of cost benefit analysis and economic impact analysis in public transport investment28. How well does BRT perform in contrast to LRT? An Australian case study
Part VIII: Energy29. Can bus be cleaner and greener than rail?
Part IX: Social Exclusion30. The roles of mobility and bridging social capital in reducing social exclusion in regional Australia
Part X: Mobility as a Service (MaaS)31. Future bus transport contracts under mobility as a service regime32. Potential uptake and willingness-to-pay for mobility as a service33. Identifying broker/aggregator models for delivering mobility as a service34. What might road congestion look like in the future under a collaborative and connected mobility model?