This book investigates how established transport planning tools can
evolve to understand and plan for the ever-changing contemporary
mobilities that influence the opportunities available to individuals. It
discusses existing techniques, revised in the light of the growing
interest in the social implications of transport planning decisions:
these include analytical tools to interpret consolidated and emerging
phenomena, as well as operational tools to tackle new and existing
mobility demands and needs. The book then addresses the implications of
everyday mobility for individuals and communities. The result of a
continuous exchange between the two authors, it brings together the
results of their various research projects. Despite referring to
different objects and settings, the work presented is connected by an
underlying interest in the impact that mobility has on people in an
increasingly mobile world, and the need to include such concerns into
mobility planning and policy.