This book explores the geography of the everyday roadway and contemplates how regulation and design shape our streets. People may question the hegemony of cars, but reimagining public streets is a major conceptual and technical challenge. Drawing from "new mobilities" and transport studies, Prytherch addresses how streets are structured by policy standards; what it means to have a right to the street; and how a more just street would look-in both theory and practice. He summarizes key traffic statutes, case laws, and engineering manuals, and interprets these in relation to mobility rights and justice. At its core, the book moves beyond criticism to highlight emerging movements which aim to develop more complete and livable streets for everyone.



Autorentext
David Prytherch is Professor of Geography at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, USA. He has served on the Oxford Planning Commission and City Council, focusing on sustainability and intermodal transportation.

Inhalt
1. Introduction

PART I 

2. Rethinking the Street as Space of Mobility, Rights, and (In)justice

PART II

3. Legal Geographies of the American Right-of-Way
4. The Contested Right to the Right-of-Way
5. Engineering the Roadway as Space of Flow
6. Controlling the Roadway: Signs, Markings, and Signals

PART III

7. Streets for Everyone: Intermodal Equity and Complete Streets
8. Creating Real Spaces for People: Emerging Standards for Intermodal Design
9. The (Block-by-Block) Fight for A More Just American Street
10. Towards an Equitable and Livable Street
Titel
Law, Engineering, and the American Right-of-Way
Untertitel
Imagining a More Just Street
EAN
9783319757056
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
13.04.2018
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Dateigrösse
2.73 MB
Anzahl Seiten
210