Incorporating informal operations in public transport system transformation: the case of Cape Town, South Africa

Autores/as

  • Peter Wilkinson

Palabras clave:

Integrated rapid transit system. Cape Town. Public transport system

Resumen

Efforts in Cape Town to bring about a fundamental transformation of the existing fragmented and relatively dysfunctional public transport system to a comprehensively planned ‘integrated rapid transit’ system, which includes the introduction of bus rapid transit services as a key component, have encountered
certain institutionally embedded obstacles. This paper briefly outlines the nature of these problems, focusing in particular on the difficulties experienced in engaging with, and effectively incorporating, informal minibus-taxi operations which serve a significant segment of the city’s public transport passenger market. It seeks to draw out the main policy implications, as well lessons which might be taken up elsewhere, in other initiatives to address the differentiated mobilities and travel patterns which shape the ‘urban transport divide’ in many cities of the ‘global South’

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Biografía del autor/a

Peter Wilkinson

BSc (Civil Engineering) from the University of Natal and Master of City and Regional Planning from the University of Cape Town, associate professor of School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics, Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, and teacher of City and Regional Planning Programme and Transport Studies Programme Centre for Transport Studies, University of Cape Town, Cape Town - South Africa

Publicado

2017-09-01

Cómo citar

Wilkinson, P. (2017). Incorporating informal operations in public transport system transformation: the case of Cape Town, South Africa. Revista Brasileira De Gestão Urbana, 2(1), 85–95. Recuperado a partir de https://periodicos.pucpr.br/Urbe/article/view/19275

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Artigos