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Most parking research to date has been conducted in Western countries. Parking: An International Perspective is different. Taking a planetary view of urbanism, this book examines parking policies in 12 cities on five continents: Auckland, Bangkok, Doha, Los Angeles, Melbourne, Nairobi, Rotterdam, Santiago, Sao Paulo, Shenzhen, Singapore, and Tokyo. Chapters are similarly structured, and contain detailed information about the current parking strategies and issues in these cities. The discussion of parking is placed in the context of transport, mobility, land-use, society, technology, and planning in each of these cities …mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Most parking research to date has been conducted in Western countries. Parking: An International Perspective is different. Taking a planetary view of urbanism, this book examines parking policies in 12 cities on five continents: Auckland, Bangkok, Doha, Los Angeles, Melbourne, Nairobi, Rotterdam, Santiago, Sao Paulo, Shenzhen, Singapore, and Tokyo. Chapters are similarly structured, and contain detailed information about the current parking strategies and issues in these cities. The discussion of parking is placed in the context of transport, mobility, land-use, society, technology, and planning in each of these cities
Autorenporträt
Dorina Pojani is Senior Lecturer in urban planning at The University of Queensland, Australia. Her research interests encompass built environment topics (urban transport, design, and housing) in the Global North and South. She has held guest teaching and/or research positions in Austria, Chile, Italy, and the Netherlands.

Jonathan Corcoran is Professor in human geography at The University of Queensland, Australia. He serves as director of the Queensland Centre for Population Research and co-editor of Australian Population Studies. His research interests lie in the fields of demography, migration, and spatial science, with a focus on quantitative methods.

Neil Sipe is Professor in urban and regional planning at the University of Queensland, Australia, and serves as the editor-in-chief of Australian Planning. His research interests include transport and land use planning, natural resource management, and international comparisons of planning systems.