tailieunhanh - World Transport, Policy & Practice Volume 17.4 January 2012: A Future Beyond the Car?

Making Women’s Preventive Care Affordable, Including Contraception. Under the Affordable Care Act, most insurance companies will be required to cover basic preventive health services – including contraception – at no extra cost. In July 2011, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) issued groundbreaking recommendations for which women’s preventive services should be covered. As a result, an estimated million women in private insurance plans benefitted from access to preventive services such as mammograms, screenings for cervical cancer, prenatal care, flu and pneumonia shots, and regular well-baby and well-child. | World Transport Policy Practice Volume January 2012 Special edition A Future Beyond the Car Eco-Logica Ltd. ISSN 1352-7614 2012 EcO-LOGicA LTD ERIC BRITTON EDITOR PROFESSOR JOHN WHITELEGG STOCKHOLM Environment institute at YORK university OF YORK YORK YO10 SYW EDITORIAL BOARD PROFESSOR Helmut HOLZAPFEL UNIVERSITAT KASSEL FACHBEREICH 06 - architektur Stadt- und Landschaftsplanung AG INTEGRIERTE VERKEHRSPLANUNG Gottschalkstrasse 28 D-34127 KASSEL GERMANY MANAGING Director EcoPLAN international The Centre for Technology Systems Studies 8 10 RUE JOSEPH BARA F-75006 PARIS FRANCE PAUL Tranter School of physical Environmental mathematical Sciences university of new South wales AUSTRALIAN Defence Force academy Canberra act 2600 AUSTRALIA Publisher Eco-logica LTD. 53 Derwent ROAD Lancaster LA1 3ES TELEPHONE 44 0 1524 63175 E-MAIL http Contents Editorial Introduction 3 A Future Beyond the Car Steve Melia Abstracts Keywords 7 Three Views on Peak Car 8 Phil Goodwin The Implications of Climate Change for the Future of the Car 18 Mayer Hillman Jan Gehl and New Visions for Walkable Australian Cities 30 Anne Matan and Peter Newman The Future of Carfree Development in York UK 42 Randall Ghent The Delivery of Freight in Carfree Cities 54 Joel Crawford 2 World Transport Policy and Practice Volume January 2012 Editorial A Future Beyond the Car Editorial Introduction Steve Melia How to mitigate counteract or eliminate the problems created by cars and traffic is the challenge at the heart of most transport research and many past articles published in this journal. This special edition turns this focus towards the future. The suggestion of a future beyond the car may seem extreme or utopian in a discipline and a world preoccupied with the present. But as Goodwin suggests in the next article the assumption that trends observable today will continue indefinitely will often seem short-sighted from some point in the

TÀI LIỆU MỚI ĐĂNG
35    132    0    23-12-2024