Published: November 19, 2009
Mineta Transportation Institute Publishes Report on How to Ease Women's Fear of Transportation Environments
SAN JOSE, Calif. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - The Mineta
Transportation Institute (MTI) has published Report 09-01, How
to Ease Women´s Fear of Transportation Environments: Case Studies and
Best Practices. This study examines women's safety on
transit, with a thorough literature review on the topic, in-depth
interviews with representatives of national interest groups, a survey of
U.S. transit operators, and presentation of case studies and best
practices from the U.S. and abroad.
"Most survey respondents believed that women have distinct safety and
security needs, but only one-third of them believed that transit
agencies should implement specific programs to address these needs,"
said Dr. Loukaitou-Sideris. "The survey also suggested that there is a
significant mismatch between the safety and security needs and desires
of female passengers and the types and locations of strategies that
transit agencies use. However, the survey of transit operators found
that only a handful of agencies in the U.S. currently have programs that
target the safety and security needs of women riders."
The relationship between women's fear and the built environment has been
a research topic. The findings have shown that women feel unsafe in many
public spaces, including transportation environments such as desolate
bus stops and train cars, dimly lit park-and-ride lots, and parking
structures. Overcrowded transit vehicles also stress many women, who
often avoid them by changing their transportation modes and travel
patterns. This is especially true for particular groups of women,
including those of a certain age, income, sexual orientation, and
residence.
The women who were interviewed offered design, policing, security
technology, education, and outreach strategies that would make women
riders feel safer in public settings. Some of these initiatives already
are used outside the U.S.
Based on lessons from those initiatives, as well as from the women's
interviews, the study includes a list of recommendations, such as
including women's opinions in transit planning, collaboration between
transit agencies and non-profit groups, prioritizing safety and security
needs in the transportation system, and other points.
The free document can be downloaded from www.transweb.sjsu.edu.
Click "Research" and then "Publications." Scroll down to the report.
ABOUT THE PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
Dr. Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris is professor and former chair,
Department of Urban Planning, UCLA. She holds a doctorate in urban
planning and master's degrees in architecture and urban planning from
the University of Southern California. She specializes in urban design,
and physical and land use planning. She has published extensively on
issues of downtown development, inner-city revitalization, cultural uses
of parks and open spaces, transit-oriented design, and transit safety.
She has consulted to the Transportation Research Board, Federal Highway
Administration, Southern California Association of Governments, Los
Angeles Neighborhood Initiative, Transportation and Education Ministries
of Greece, and many municipal governments and organizations on issues of
urban design, land use and transportation, and higher education. She
coauthored Sidewalks: Conflict and Negotiation over Public
Space (MIT Press: 2009) and Urban Design Downtown: Poetics and
Politics of Form (University of California Press: 1998), and
co-edited Jobs and Economic Development in Minority
Communities (Temple University Press: 2006).
The research team included Amanda Bornstein, who holds a Master's degree
from the UCLA Department of Urban Planning; Camille Fink and Linda
Samuels, both Ph.D. students, UCLA Department of Urban Planning; and
Shahin Gerami, Associate Professor, Department of Social Sciences, and
Coordinator, Program of Women's Studies, San Jose State University.
ABOUT THE MINETA TRANSPORTATION INSTITUTE:
The Mineta
Transportation Institute (MTI) was established by Congress in 1991
as part of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA)
and was reauthorized under TEA-21 and again under SAFETEA-LU. The
institute is funded by Congress through the US DOT's Research and
Innovative Technology Administration, by the California Legislature
through the Department of Transportation (Caltrans), and by other public
and private grants and donations, including the U.S. Department of
Homeland Security. The US DOT selected MTI as a national "Center of
Excellence" following a 2002 competition.
The Institute has a Board of Trustees whose internationally-respected
members represent all major surface transportation modes. MTI's focus on
policy and management resulted from a board assessment of the industry's
unmet needs and led directly to choosing the San Jose State University
College of Business as the Institute's home. MTI conducts research,
education, and information and technology transfer focusing on
multi-modal surface transportation policy and management issues. Visit www.transweb.sjsu.edu.
Mineta Transportation Institute
Donna Maurillo, 831-234-4009
maurillo@mti.sjsu.edu
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