Part One: Introduction 1. Introduction 2. Measuring transport equity: Key components, framings and metrics
Part Two: Benefits of transport: Accessibility 3. An index to measure accessibility poverty risk 4. Using person-based accessibility measures to assess the equity of transport systems 5. Equity analysis of dynamic bike-and-ride accessibility in the Netherlands 6. Can the urban poor reach their jobs? Evaluating equity effects of relocation and public transport projects in Ahmedabad, India 7. Transport equity in low-income societies: Affordability impact on destination accessibility measures
Part Three: Burdens of transport: Health, environment and other externalities 8. The health impacts of urban transport: Linkages, tools and research needs 9. Assessing health inequalities related to urban and transport determinants of mental health 10. A public health approach to assessing road safety equity - the RoSE cycle 11. Distribution of transportation "goods" and "bads" in a Canadian metropolis: a diagnosis of the situation and potential interventions to tackle environmental disparities 12. Safety and daily mobilities of urban women: - Methodologies to confront the policy of "invisibility"
Part Four: Social outcomes from transport interventions 13. Applying a subjective wellbeing lens to transport equity 14. Social impact assessment: The case of bus rapid transit in the city of Quito, Ecuador 15. Measuring the influence of social capital and personal networks on transport disadvantage 16. Using a capability approach-based survey for reducing equity gaps in transport appraisal. Application in Santiago de Chile 17. A behavioral framework for needs-based transport assessment 18. Assessing the equity impacts of a transportation investment program
Part Five: Closure 19. Conclusion
Karen Lucas is Professor of Transport and Social Analysis at the Institute for Transport Studies at the University of Leeds, United Kingdom, She has been a social researcher of transport for 20 years with a special interest in the interactions between transport poverty and social deprivation.
Karel Martens is Associate Professor of Transport Planning at the Faculty of Architecture and Town Planning at the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology,Haifa, Israel, and at the Institute for Management Research at Radboud University, Nijmegen, the Netherlands. He has published extensively on the nexus between transport and justice, culminating in his recent book Transport Justice: Designing Fair Transport Systems.
Floridea Di Ciommo is researcher and co-director of cambiaMO-changing Mobility. She coordinated the Transport and Equity Analysis - COST Action and has contributed to research on the nexus between travel behavior, equity and gender issues. She also regularly teaches and supervises PhD and M.Sc. students in Spain and France.
Ariane Dupont-Kieffer is based at the University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne. From 2005-2014, she was employed by IFSSTAR where she worked to build an understanding of the links between economic theory, modeling, policymaking and policy assessment in transport. Her current focus is more specifically on the history of economics and macroeconomics, and the relationship between measurement issues, statistical analysis and policymaking. She is a leader of the Women's Issue in Transportation Committee of the TRB.