Off the road? : reflections on transportation geography in the information age.

Author(s)
Hanson, S.
Year
Abstract

The traditional focus of transportation geography has been on the movement of people; in this sense, the concerns of transportation geographers have been with life on the road. The information revolution creates opportunities for a growing proportion of interactions to occur in the frictionless realm of cyberspace and thereby poses questions about life off the road. With this in mind, this paper reflects on some of the challenges that information technology (IT) poses for transportation geography. It is argued that IT will expand access and equity only if it enriches social capital, requiring innovative ways of meshing off-the-road with on-the-road practices. Transportation geographers must think creatively about how the growing presence of IT can help mitigate inequality of access and help foster sustainable transportation.

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Publication

Library number
C 32583 (In: C 32579) /72 / ITRD E828434
Source

In: Transport and information systems, Classics in Transport Analysis series 6, 2003, p. 32-40, 33 ref.; Originally published as: Journal of Transport Geography, Vol. 6 (1998), No. 4 (December), p. 241-249

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.