Travel Demand Management and Road User Pricing: Success, Failure and Feasibility
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Contents: Editorial: travel demand management and road user pricing: success, failure and feasibility Part I Travel Demand Management: Investigation of Impacts: Non-negligible side effects of traffic demand management, Gerd Sammer Validation and comparisons of choice models, Stefano de Luca and Guilio Erberto Cantarella On-street parking pricing: ex ante ex post profile analysis following a 50% increase in on-street parking charges in Dublin city, Andrew Kelly and Peter Clinch Modelling impacts of tolling systems with multiple user classes, Kathryn Stewart The network society and the networked traveller, Kay W. Axhausen, John Urry and Jonas Larsen An evaluation of future traveller information system and its effectiveness in demand management schemes, Amy Weihong Guo, Phil Blythe, Patrick Olivier, Pushpendra Singh and Hai Nam Ha. Part II International Experiences with TDM Measures: Variable message signs: are they effective TDM measures?, Wafaa Saleh, Craig Walker and Chih Wei Pai Transantiago: the fall and rise of a radical public transport intervention, Juan Carlos MuA+-oz, Juan de Dios Ortuzar and Antonio Gschwender Unexpected delay and the cost of lateness on I-394 high occupancy/toll lanes, Nebiyou Y. Tilahun and David M. Levinson Integrated network improvement and tolling schedule: mixed strategy versus pure demand management, Barbara W.Y. Siu and Hong K. Lo Traveller responses to Stockholm congestion pricing trial: who changed, where did they go, and what did it cost them?, Joel P. Franklin, Jonas Eliasson and Anders KarlstrA m Travel demand management measures: technical answers or political gains? Closing remarks, Gerd Sammer and Wafaa Saleh Index.