Go to journal home page - Journal of Transport & Health

Journal of Transport & Health

Walking & Cycling: The contributions of health and transport geography

Edited by Dr. Seraphim Alvanides
Volume 1, Issue 4,

Pages 211-346 (December 2014)

Actions for selected articles

/

Receive an update when the latest issues in this journal are published
Sign in to set up alerts
  1. Inside Front Cover

    Page IFC
    View PDF
  2. Active transport: Why and where do people (not) walk or cycle?

    Pages 211-213
  3. The marginalisation of bicycling in Modernist urban transport planning

    Pages 214-222
  4. What limits the pedestrian? Exploring perceptions of walking in the built environment and in the context of every-day life

    Pages 223-231
  5. Spatial and social variations in cycling patterns in a mature cycling country exploring differences and trends

    Pages 232-242
  6. History, risk, infrastructure: perspectives on bicycling in the Netherlands and the UK

    Pages 243-250
    View PDF
  7. The link between socioeconomic position, access to cycling infrastructure and cycling participation rates: An ecological study in Melbourne, Australia

    Pages 251-259
  8. ‘You feel unusual walking’: The invisible presence of walking in four English cities

    Pages 260-266
  9. Active transport, independent mobility and territorial range among children residing in disadvantaged areas

    Pages 267-273
  10. An evaluation of distance estimation accuracy and its relationship to transport mode for the home-to-school journey by adolescents

    Pages 274-278
  11. Commentary on an evaluation of distance estimation accuracy and its relationship to transportation mode for the home-to-school journey by adolescents

    Pages 279-281
  12. They go straight home – don’t they? Using global positioning systems to assess adolescent school-travel patterns

    Pages 282-287
  13. School travel planning in Canada: Identifying child, family, and school-level characteristics associated with travel mode shift from driving to active school travel

    Pages 288-294
  14. Modelling the potential impact on CO2 emissions of an increased uptake of active travel for the home to school commute using individual level data

    Pages 295-304
    View PDF
  15. Evaluating artificial neural networks for predicting minute ventilation and lung deposited dose in commuting cyclists

    Pages 305-315
  16. Variations in active transport behavior among different neighborhoods and across adult life stages

    Pages 316-325
  17. Community design, street networks, and public health

    Pages 326-340
  18. A transport and health geography perspective on walking and cycling

    Pages 341-345

ISSN: 2214-1405