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Cars in Cities: Challenges and Alternatives is a Course

Cars in Cities: Challenges and Alternatives

Self-paced

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Full course description

Start:

Anytime

Duration:

1 Hour

Location:

Online

Price:

Free


 

What you'll learn:

Everyone who values cities is disturbed by automobiles,” wrote Jane Jacobs, a famous urban thinker. Parking lots go hand-in-hand with automobiles, and bring their own host of issues, including cost, increased distances between activities, and disturbed landscapes." In this course you’ll learn how cities in the United States and around the world differ in terms of their dependence on cars for transportation, as well as learning how cities have fostered transit, walking and biking as alternatives to the single occupant vehicle.


Who is this course designed for:

Youth, adults; anyone interested in cities


What you'll receive:

Upon completing the course, you’ll receive a digital badge that you can share on social media, on a web site, or in a myriad of other ways!

Meet the instructors


Deborah Salon

Associate Professor, ASU School of Geographical Sciences & Urban Planning

Dr. Salon holds a PhD in Agricultural and Resource Economics from the University of California, Davis, and is currently an Assistant Professor at Arizona State University. Before joining ASU, she completed a post-doctoral fellowship at Columbia University's Earth Institute and subsequently held a research appointment at UC Davis's Institute of Transportation Studies. Professor Salon studies transportation in cities with the goal of contributing to our collective understanding of how these systems work, and how policies and smart investments might improve them.


David King

Assistant Professor, ASU School of Geographical Sciences & Urban Planning

Dr. King has been an Assistant Professor at Arizona State University since 2016. He researches the codependence of transportation and land use planning along with transportation finance and economics. Of particular interest are transportation policies such as parking management, taxi services and microtransit. His current research focuses on taxi and jitney services, informal transit, street design, and how new technologies affect transportation finance and local policy. Professor King is a member of the Transportation Research Board’s Paratransit Committee and frequently consults with private firms and public organizations about challenges and opportunities in passenger travel, especially with regard to demographic and technological change.