stakeholders as a pre-condition for gaining support from politicians. This paper explores the key influences and the extent to which particular road pricing schemes are acceptable to the community at large, and how this translates into support if a scheme were subject to a vote in a referendum. Using data collected in Sydney in 2012 from a sample of car users, we estimate a recursive simultaneous bivariate probit model that recognises the endogeneity effect of scheme acceptability on voting plans. We find that there is a very strong link between voting intentions and scheme acceptability, and provide a series of direct elasticity estimates of the influence that the cost elements of road pricing reform schemes have on the joint probability o...
In this paper, we take a political economy approach to study the introduction of urban congestion to...
We study the political economy of urban traffic policy. We consider a city and its suburbs. The cit...
In February 2005 residents of Edinburgh in Scotland, UK, were given the opportunity to vote in a ref...
This paper investigates support for road pricing reform within the framework of a referendum voting ...
This paper investigates support for road pricing reform within a referendum voting choice model. Cen...
This paper investigates support for road pricing reform within the framework of a referendum voting ...
Voting support for congestion charging has a very recent history with, until now, only two congestio...
This paper investigates support for road pricing reform within a referendum voting choice model. Cen...
The greatest hurdle facing road pricing reform is political commitment. With rare exception, efforts...
This paper contends that majority opposition from the voting public is the major barrier to urban ro...
International audienceAbundant literature now exists on the acceptability of the new pricing measure...
The greatest hurdle facing road pricing reform is political commitment. With rare exception, efforts...
Introduction Abundant literature now exists on the acceptability of the new pricing measure represen...
The literature on acceptability of road pricing schemes is reviewed, and a number of limitations of...
In this paper, we use a simple majority voting model to study the introduction of urban congestion t...
In this paper, we take a political economy approach to study the introduction of urban congestion to...
We study the political economy of urban traffic policy. We consider a city and its suburbs. The cit...
In February 2005 residents of Edinburgh in Scotland, UK, were given the opportunity to vote in a ref...
This paper investigates support for road pricing reform within the framework of a referendum voting ...
This paper investigates support for road pricing reform within a referendum voting choice model. Cen...
This paper investigates support for road pricing reform within the framework of a referendum voting ...
Voting support for congestion charging has a very recent history with, until now, only two congestio...
This paper investigates support for road pricing reform within a referendum voting choice model. Cen...
The greatest hurdle facing road pricing reform is political commitment. With rare exception, efforts...
This paper contends that majority opposition from the voting public is the major barrier to urban ro...
International audienceAbundant literature now exists on the acceptability of the new pricing measure...
The greatest hurdle facing road pricing reform is political commitment. With rare exception, efforts...
Introduction Abundant literature now exists on the acceptability of the new pricing measure represen...
The literature on acceptability of road pricing schemes is reviewed, and a number of limitations of...
In this paper, we use a simple majority voting model to study the introduction of urban congestion t...
In this paper, we take a political economy approach to study the introduction of urban congestion to...
We study the political economy of urban traffic policy. We consider a city and its suburbs. The cit...
In February 2005 residents of Edinburgh in Scotland, UK, were given the opportunity to vote in a ref...