206 results on '"Manaugh, Kevin"'
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2. Who has access to cycling infrastructure in Canada? A social equity analysis
3. Dynamic equity in urban amenities distribution: An accessibility-driven assessment
4. Sociodemographic matters: Analyzing interactions of individuals' characteristics with walkability when modelling walking behavior
5. Geographic identity and perceptions of walkable space
6. Public health, active transport, and land use
7. Pandemic-time bike lanes in three large Canadian urban centres- differences in use and public perception by socio-demographic groups and geographical contexts
8. Factors influencing subjective walkability : Results from built environment audit data
9. 2 Mobilisons-Nous: “Violent Infrastructure” and Pedestrian Space in Montreal
10. Winter cycling
11. The route not taken: Equity and transparency in unfunded transit proposals
12. Providing discounted transit passes to younger university students: Are there effects on public transit, car and active transportation trips to university?
13. Rethinking walkability and developing a conceptual definition of active living environments to guide research and practice
14. Flying cars and boring companies: Interrogating the feasibility of the transport futures of tech executives
15. Building CapaCITY/É for sustainable transportation: protocol for an implementation science research program in healthy cities
16. Closing the Cycling Gap: Examining Equity Implications of Montreal’s Bikesharing Network Growth
17. The pursuit of cycling equity: A review of Canadian transport plans
18. Measuring accessibility to hospitals by public transport: An assessment of eight Canadian metropolitan regions
19. From workplace attachment to commuter satisfaction before and after a workplace relocation
20. Illuminating Spaces in the Classroom with Qualitative GIS
21. Generating walkability from pedestrians’ perspectives using a qualitative GIS method
22. The socio-environmental impacts of public urban fruit trees: A Montreal case-study
23. List of Contributors to Volume 5
24. Road Modes: Walking
25. The impacts of residential relocation on commute habits: A qualitative perspective on households’ mobility behaviors and strategies
26. The impacts of varying survey design on reported trip satisfaction
27. Assessing safety of shared space using cyclist-pedestrian interactions and automated video conflict analysis
28. ‘Seeing Like a Citizen’: Rethinking City Street Transformations through the Lens of Epistemic Justice
29. Impact of road traffic and speed on children: Injuries, social inequities, and active transport
30. A social-ecological conceptualization of children’s mobility
31. Contributors
32. Individual and household influences
33. Equity in practice? Evaluations of equity in planning for bus rapid transit
34. Stores and mores: Toward socializing walkability
35. My way or the highway? Framing transportation planners’ attitudes in negotiating professional expertise and public insight
36. Who is Buying SUVs and Light Trucks in Montreal? A Factor and Cluster Analysis
37. Inclusive growth, public transit infrastructure investments and neighbourhood trajectories of inequality in Montreal
38. Developing a national dataset of bicycle infrastructure for Canada using open data sources
39. ‘Seeing Like a Citizen’: Rethinking City Street Transformations through the Lens of Epistemic Justice
40. Introducing a Framework for Cycling Investment Prioritization
41. Integrating social equity into urban transportation planning: A critical evaluation of equity objectives and measures in transportation plans in North America
42. Overcoming barriers to cycling: understanding frequency of cycling in a University setting and the factors preventing commuters from cycling on a regular basis
43. The importance of neighborhood type dissonance in understanding the effect of the built environment on travel behavior
44. Use of the Urban Core Index to analyze residential mobility: the case of seniors in Canadian metropolitan regions
45. The happy commuter: A comparison of commuter satisfaction across modes
46. Is Canada’s Commuter Bicycling Population Becoming More Representative of the General Population Over Time? A National Portrait of Bicycle Commute Mode Share 1996–2016.
47. Situating Divergent Perceptions of a Rapid-Cycling Network in Montréal, Canada.
48. Validity of Food Outlet Databases from Commercial and Community Science datasets in Vancouver and Montreal
49. Uniquely satisfied: Exploring cyclist satisfaction
50. Towards equitable transit: examining transit accessibility and social need in Toronto, Canada, 1996–2006
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