Active Transport and the Journey to Work in Northern Ireland: A Longitudinal Perspective 1991-2011

I. Shuttleworth, Claire Feehan
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Abstract

Abstract Policy interventions to encourage the use of healthy and sustainable modes of travel to work (such as walking and cycling) have encountered varying levels of success. In areas such as Northern Ireland, and cities such as Belfast, the car remains the dominant mode for journeys to and from work. This paper explores why this is the case by examining the individual, household, and geographical factors that govern (a) changing between one census and another to walking or cycling from other transport modes; (b) changing from walking or cycling; and continuing to walk or cycle. The analysis is undertaken using the Northern Ireland Longitudinal Study (NILS), a 28% random sample of the population. The results show that walking or cycling is associated with lower-status jobs, urban locations, with no clear association with better self-reported health. In contrast, car commuting is associated with better education, health, and higher labour market status. The analysis shows that policies to encourage the use of more sustainable and less polluting transport face formidable barriers from status perceptions, time budgets, and the geographical contexts of Northern Ireland and Belfast.
北爱尔兰的主动交通和工作之旅:纵向视角1991-2011
鼓励使用健康和可持续的上班方式(如步行和骑自行车)的政策干预措施取得了不同程度的成功。在北爱尔兰等地区和贝尔法斯特等城市,汽车仍然是上下班的主要方式。本文通过研究个人、家庭和地理因素来探讨为什么会出现这种情况(a)在一次人口普查和另一次人口普查之间从其他交通方式转向步行或骑自行车;(b)由步行或骑单车转为步行;继续步行或骑自行车。该分析是使用北爱尔兰纵向研究(NILS)进行的,该研究对人口进行了28%的随机抽样。结果表明,步行或骑自行车与地位较低的工作、城市地点有关,但与自我报告的健康状况较好没有明确的联系。相比之下,汽车通勤与更好的教育、健康和更高的劳动力市场地位有关。分析表明,鼓励使用更可持续、污染更少的交通工具的政策面临着来自地位观念、时间预算以及北爱尔兰和贝尔法斯特地理环境的巨大障碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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