Authors
Sally Cairns, Lynn Sloman, Carey Newson, Jillian Anable, Alistair Kirkbride, Phil Goodwin
Publication date
2008/9/1
Source
Transport Reviews
Volume
28
Issue
5
Pages
593-618
Publisher
Routledge
Description
In recent years, there has been a growing interest in a range of transport policy initiatives which are designed to influence people’s travel behaviour away from single‐occupancy car use and towards more benign and efficient options, through a combination of marketing, information, incentives and tailored new services. In transport policy discussions, these are now widely described as ‘soft’ factor interventions or ‘smarter choice’ measures or ‘mobility management’ tools. In 2004, the UK Department for Transport commissioned a major study to examine whether large‐scale programmes of these measures could potentially deliver substantial cuts in car use. The purpose of this article is to clarify the approach taken in the study, the types of evidence reviewed and the overall conclusions reached. In summary, the results suggested that, within approximately ten years, smarter choice measures have the potential …
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