Revision with unchanged content. As global demand for goods and travel
increases, there is an increasing need for the cross-border transport
services and the physical infrastructure - roads, bridges, and
rail-lines - to meet that demand. From the European experience with
implementation of the Trans-European Transport Network to U.S.
metropolitan areas trying to construct regional public transport
systems, governments at all levels and sizes are faced with the
challenge of cross border transport demand. This book examines the
experience of operating transport services and constructing transport
infrastructure across political boundaries at various levels of
government from U.S. local boundaries, to between U.S. States, to
between the member-states of the European Union. This experience
suggests that there are common types of organizational arrangements to
deliver cross border transport infrastructure and services. This
experience will be useful to individuals in transport planning,
engineering, economics, and logistics investigating how to meet the
growing demand for cross border transport.