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Featured researches published by Christa Hubers.


Environment and Planning B-planning & Design | 2011

Anything, Anywhere, Anytime? Developing Indicators to Assess the Spatial and Temporal Fragmentation of Activities

Bayarma Alexander; Christa Hubers; Tim Schwanen; Martin Dijst; Dick Ettema

Developments in transportation and information and communication technologies (ICTs) have facilitated the process labeled activity fragmentation. In this process, the weakened associations between activity, time, and place that ICTs made possible facilitate the disintegration of activities into smaller subtasks, which can then be performed at different times and at different locations. However, until now discussion of the fragmentation of activity hypothesis has been limited to the theoretical domain and largely absent from the empirical domain. In the study reported here we connect both domains by (1) developing a set of measures of activity fragmentation and (2) applying them to study the fragmentation of the activity of paid work using combined activity, travel, and communication diary data collected in the Netherlands in 2007 in order to assess the performance of these indicators. The results show that the indicators differentiate between the multiple facets of activity fragmentation (such as the number, dispersion, and configuration of fragments). The preliminary analyses also suggest that, although the temporal fragmentation of activities appears to be or to have become more common, spatial activity fragmentation is rather limited.


Geografiska Annaler Series B-human Geography | 2011

Coordinating everyday life in the Netherlands: a holistic quantitative approach to the analysis of ICT-related and other work-life balance strategies.

Christa Hubers; Tim Schwanen; Martin Dijst

Abstract. Due to womens increased participation in the labour force, more and more family‐households are now juggling paid labour and care‐giving in space and time and do so in many different ways. Much research and policy about how households try to establish a satisfactory work‐life balance singles out particular coping strategies, such as telecommuting or the mobilizing of informal help by relatives or friends. While insightful, foregrounding single strategies may oversimplify the complex reality of everyday life, in which people often skilfully weave together multiple coping strategies. As well, advances in information and communication technologies (ICTs) have further diversified the arsenal of possible coping strategies, but the academic literature has yet to verify whether ICT usage complements or substitutes the adoption of other coping strategies. Adopting a holistic quantitative approach this study assesses which combinations of coping strategies prevail and which role ICTs play in this regard among one‐ and dual‐earner households in the Utrecht–Amersfoort–Hilversum area of the Netherlands. We also examine systematic variations in strategy combination by socio‐demographics, ICT possession, affordability and skills, social network factors, employment and commute factors, spatial factors, lifestyle orientation and other factors. We identify several distinct combinations of strategies and find that ICT‐related strategies are frequently adopted by highly educated employed parents in the Netherlands attempting to achieve a satisfying work‐life balance and tend to complement other types of strategies. Which combinations of strategies have been adopted depends most strongly on the presence of young children, but also on employment factors and characteristics of the environment surrounding the dwelling and main workplace.


Housing Studies | 2018

Parental marital dissolution and the intergenerational transmission of homeownership

Christa Hubers; Caroline Dewilde; Paul M. de Graaf

Abstract Children of homeowners are more likely to enter homeownership than are children whose parents rent. We investigate whether this association is dependent on parental divorce, focusing on parental assistance as a conduit of intergenerational transmission. Event history analyses of data for England and Wales from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) show that the intergenerational transmission of homeownership is stronger for children of divorced parents compared with children of married parents. Such an effect may arise from two channels: (1) children of divorced parents are more in need of parental assistance due to socio-economic disadvantages associated with parental divorce; and (2) compared with married parents, divorced homeowning parents (mothers) rely more on housing wealth, rather than financial wealth, for assisting children. Findings support both explanations. Children of divorced parents are furthermore less likely to co-reside. We find limited evidence that when they do, co-residence is less conductive to homeownership compared with children from married parents.


Time & Society | 2015

The fragmented worker? : ICTs, coping strategies and gender differences in the temporal and spatial fragmentation of paid labour

Christa Hubers; Martin Dijst; Tim Schwanen

Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) are often proclaimed to facilitate the fragmentation of activities, a process whereby a certain activity is divided into several smaller pieces, which are performed at different times and/or locations. This study analyzes two-day combined activity, travel and communication diaries collected among Dutch households and presents quantitative findings of the associations between ICTs and the spatiotemporal fragmentation of paid labour. Controlling for various coping strategies, employment and commute factors, household characteristics, lifestyle orientation, time personality and spatial context, statistically significant relations were found between ICTs and the spatiotemporal fragmentation of paid labour for both men and women. The fact that both positive and negative associations were found suggests that ICTs can be adopted to make use of opportunities to arrange paid labour in a flexible way, or as a compensation when such opportunities are lacking. The results also indicate that up to a certain degree these associations are gender specific.


Journal of transport and health | 2015

Future mobility in an ageing society - where are we heading?

Ian Shergold; Glenn Lyons; Christa Hubers


Transportation Research Part A-policy and Practice | 2014

Activity fragmentation, ICT and travel: An exploratory Path Analysis of spatiotemporal interrelationships

Eran Ben-Elia; Bayarma Alexander; Christa Hubers; Dick Ettema


Foresight | 2013

Assessing future travel demand: a need to account for non‐transport technologies?

Christa Hubers; Glenn Lyons


Transport Policy | 2013

New technologies for the old: Potential implications of living in later life for travel demand

Christa Hubers; Glenn Lyons


Archive | 2011

THE UNUSUAL SUSPECTS: THE IMPACT OF NON-TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGIES ON SOCIAL PRACTICES AND TRAVEL DEMAND

Christa Hubers; Glenn Lyons; Thomas Birtchnell


Transportation Research Board 86th Annual MeetingTransportation Research Board | 2007

Exploring the Fragmentation of Activity Gold Mine: The Influence of ICT Use on Daily Activity Patterns

Christa Hubers; Tim Schwanen; Martin Dijst

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Glenn Lyons

University of the West of England

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Ian Shergold

University of the West of England

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G. Parkhurst

University of the West of England

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Geoff Andrews

University of the West of England

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