It has been widely established in the UK and other developed countries that men commute longer than women and that fathers travel furthest to work while mothers travel least. This paper models a wide variety of factors that affect commuting times including gender, presence of children and working hours (part- and full-time work). It finds that of particular importance to the length of commute are the worker’s age, having children, the age of their youngest child, occupation, weekly pay, and mode of transport (with public transport being associated with long commutes). The region of residence was important for men and women working full time but not for part-timers (except for women in London), while ethnicity and owner occupation were...
The objectives of this study were to investigate the determinants of employed women's allocation of ...
This paper examines the time spent commuting to/from work by workers in fifteen European countries, ...
While the job search literature has increasingly recognised the importance of the spatial distributi...
It has been widely established in the UK and other developed countries that men commute longer than ...
Restricted until 6 May 2010.The research on the effects of household responsibilities on commute len...
This paper investigates the contribution of increasing travel times to the persistent gender gap in ...
Prior literature analyzing gender differences in commuting has reported that men commute longer dist...
This study uses Hazard-based duration modelling methods to investigate commute patterns of males and...
This is the final version. Available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record. We assess the role of...
Contains fulltext : 162104.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Apart from wo...
This study employs a novel method to shed new light on disagreement in the literature over the relat...
In this paper, we seek to explore the effects of commuting time on the psychological well-being of m...
Commuting is an extremely important modern phenomenon characterised by the spatial interaction of ho...
We analyze the relationship between gender and the time devoted to commuting by men and women in fou...
Standard economic theory postulates that commuting is a choice behavior undertaken when compensated ...
The objectives of this study were to investigate the determinants of employed women's allocation of ...
This paper examines the time spent commuting to/from work by workers in fifteen European countries, ...
While the job search literature has increasingly recognised the importance of the spatial distributi...
It has been widely established in the UK and other developed countries that men commute longer than ...
Restricted until 6 May 2010.The research on the effects of household responsibilities on commute len...
This paper investigates the contribution of increasing travel times to the persistent gender gap in ...
Prior literature analyzing gender differences in commuting has reported that men commute longer dist...
This study uses Hazard-based duration modelling methods to investigate commute patterns of males and...
This is the final version. Available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record. We assess the role of...
Contains fulltext : 162104.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Apart from wo...
This study employs a novel method to shed new light on disagreement in the literature over the relat...
In this paper, we seek to explore the effects of commuting time on the psychological well-being of m...
Commuting is an extremely important modern phenomenon characterised by the spatial interaction of ho...
We analyze the relationship between gender and the time devoted to commuting by men and women in fou...
Standard economic theory postulates that commuting is a choice behavior undertaken when compensated ...
The objectives of this study were to investigate the determinants of employed women's allocation of ...
This paper examines the time spent commuting to/from work by workers in fifteen European countries, ...
While the job search literature has increasingly recognised the importance of the spatial distributi...