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Featured researches published by P Jones.


Transportation Research Record | 2008

Does Urban Road Pricing Cause Hardship to Low-Income Car Drivers?: An Affordability-Based Approach

Alasdair Cain; P Jones

A major criticism of the principle of urban road pricing (also known as congestion charging and congestion pricing) is that it is regressive, namely, that the implementation of a charging scheme is likely to result in the imposition of a disproportionately large financial burden on low-income car users and their dependents, thereby resulting in hardship. A road pricing proposal in Edinburgh, Scotland, was used as a case study to assess the potential for road pricing-related hardship. Hardship occurs when people are denied access to basic needs. A quantitative definition of hardship was developed on the basis of an affordability measure derived from the utilities sector, supplemented by two additional conditions to account for the fact that transportation in itself is not a basic need. By using this definition, it was demonstrated that households in the lowest income quintile already spent an unaffordable proportion of their income on motoring costs, as much as about 40%, whereas the affordability threshold was 32.5%. The impact of a £2 (approximately


Transport Reviews | 2016

Community Severance: Where Is It Found and at What Cost?

Pr Anciaes; P Jones; Jennifer Mindell

4 in 2008) charge on these low-income households would be negligible if it were paid less than once a week but would have a significant impact if it were paid four or more times a week, taking average aggregate motoring costs to above 50% of a low-income households total disposable income. A simple regression analysis showed that of the five different basic needs identified in the research literature, work trips were the most likely to be linked to frequent congestion charge payment among low-income car users and, thus, the most likely to be linked to an additional risk of hardship.


Archive | 1983

Understanding travel behaviour

P Jones; M C Dix; M I Clarke; I G Heggie

Abstract Community severance occurs when transport infrastructure or motorised traffic divides space and people. Despite the growing awareness of its effects on the wellbeing of local communities, the problem is not usually assessed quantitatively or assigned a monetary value. This paper reviews existing practice and research on quantitative methods dealing with community severance. The problem is first decomposed into a series of questions, which are then used as a base to review the methods found in governmental guidance documents, technical reports, and academic studies. The paper ends with recommendations for the integration of severance issues into transport planning.


Transportation Research Record | 1981

SOME RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN ACTIVITY-TRAVEL ANALYSIS AND MODELING

M I Clarke; M C Dix; P Jones; I G Heggie


Journal of Transport Geography | 2017

Using triangulation to assess a suite of tools to measure community severance

Jennifer Mindell; Pr Anciaes; Ashley Dhanani; J Stockton; P Jones; Muki Haklay; N Groce; Shaun Scholes; L Vaughan


Archive | 1983

A new approach to understanding travel behaviour and its implications for transportation planning

P Jones


Department for Transport: London, UK. | 2017

Social and behavioural questions associated with Automated Vehicles. A Literature Review

Cm Cavoli; B Phillips; Tom Cohen; P Jones


Transportation Research Part F-traffic Psychology and Behaviour | 2018

Estimating preferences for different types of pedestrian crossing facilities

Pr Anciaes; P Jones


In: Proceedings of the 14th World Conference on Transport Research. Elsevier: Shanghai, China. (2016) (In press). | 2016

The evolution of urban transport policy from car-based to people-based cities: is this development path universally applicable?

P Jones


Transport Policy | 2018

A stated preference model to value reductions in community severance caused by roads

Pr Anciaes; P Jones; Pj Metcalfe

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Pr Anciaes

University College London

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Cm Cavoli

University College London

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Ashley Dhanani

University College London

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J Stockton

University College London

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Laura Vaughan

University College London

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M Haklay

University College London

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N Groce

University College London

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Shaun Scholes

University College London

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