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Telecommunications, Transportation And Location |
Kenneth Button, University Professor and Roger Stough, Vice President for Research and Economic Development, NOVA Endowed Chair and Professor of Public Policy, George Mason University, US with Michelle Bragg, Associate Director and Director of Fellowship Programs, Africana Research Center and Senior Administrative Analyst, Office of the Vice Provost for Educational Equity, The Pennsylvania State University, US and Samantha Taylor, Freight, Logistics and Marine Division, Melbourne, Australia
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‘The title says it all. Telecommunications, Transportation and Location delivers insight on the interrelationships between the technologies of communication and mobility and the changing spatial dimensions of society. . . Telecommunications, Transportation and Location offers a very interesting presentation. Copious references and discussion of alternative perspectives permit readers to follow up on arguments. Selective uses of cross-national comparisons helps to highlight the tangible implications of different policy strategies. The authors live up to their promise of sharing insights into complex issues in an accessible language – a significant achievement that benefits and encourages essential interactions among academic, business, and public policy communities.’ – Donald G. Janelle, Journal of Regional Science
This book looks at the economics of the evolving interface between the movement of people, goods and information (telecommunications). It illustrates the increasing importance of information flows in relation to how people move about, the ways that goods are transported and on land-use patterns. The authors show how the linkages involved are not static but vary as technology develops, as social priorities shift, and as policymakers adjust institutional structures. The situation is evolving but, nevertheless, from a public policy and a narrower commercial, business perspective, it is important to gain broad insights into what is occurring and the ways that telecommunications, transportation, and location interact. This is the focus of the book.
Telecommunications, Transportation and Location contains both sytheses and interpretations of what others have found in regard to these interactions as well as new work that extends earlier findings. The material is presented in a rigorous yet accessible manner to open it to a wide audience of practitioners concerned with policy-making within various levels of government and within private business.
Researchers and academics teaching courses including transportation planning, communications, regional science, urban and regional planning, urban and regional economics and transport economics will find much to engage them within this book. It will also be very useful to logistics professionals, and policymakers and practitioners involved in transportation planning. |
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2006
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200 pp
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Hardback |
978 1 84064 846 1
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£
55.00
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on-line discount
£
49.50
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