Can We Have Our Cake and Still Eat It? A Review of Flexibility in the Structural Spatial Development and Passenger Transport Relation in Developing Countries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Structural spatial development is defined as the fundamental setup of the (urban) area. The spatial development indicates the development of the spatial structure, which is the “manner [in] which space is organized by the cumulative locations of infrastructure, economic activities and their relations” [12]. This includes the available passenger transport infrastructure, which describes the total of different transport infrastructure that is available for passenger transport in the metropolitan area.
- (Urban) passenger transport is defined as the “provision of access and mobility for people […], linking origins and destinations both internal and external to the urban area” [13]. It makes use of the passenger transport infrastructure of the Structural Spatial Development.
2. The Method of the Literature Review
- Search on Google Scholar, Scopus, and Web of Science on the topic (search settings on title, keywords, and full abstract; including strings). Key search words were (1) Structural Spatial Development, (2) Passenger Transportation, (3) Metropolitan Area, and (4) Developing Countries. These words have been used in different combinations;
- Based on the papers found in Step 1, references in and to these papers were followed and included where relevant (snowballing was included);
- The papers found in Step 1 and 2 were analyzed and structured using the key words as given by the article itself and key words as listed during the analysis per article by the author. This concerned a total of 386 unique keywords;
- Based on the keywords per article in Step 3, the articles were sieved based on their fit in the scope of the paper. This sieving was based on 18 indicators, which were derived from the listed key words in step 3, which stress the topic(s) of the reviewed papers. These indicators were land use, urban form, infrastructure, transport, accessibility, climate change, density, mobility, policy, public transport, urbanization, sustainability, commuting, compact cities, public transit, urban sprawl, and urban structure.
3. The Reviewed Literature
3.1. Descriptive Analysis
- Distribution by journal of publication: Table 1 shows the main journals in which the articles have been published;
- Distribution by year of publication: As can be seen in Figure 3, this shows a growing number of publications over time, with a dip in this number between 2010–2014;
- Overview of the keywords in the reviewed literature: Figure 5 shows the most common keywords in the reviewed literature;
- Distribution by research method used: Table 2 gives an overview of the main research methods applied.
3.2. Content Analysis
3.2.1. The Relationship between Spatial Structural Development and Passenger Transport
The SSD Perspective on the SSD-PT Relationship
The PT Perspective on the SSD-PT Relationship
3.2.2. The SSD-PT Relationship from the Economic, Environmental, and Social Perspective
The Economic Perspective on the SSD-PT Relationship
The Environmental Perspective on the SSD-PT Relationship
The Social Perspective on the SSD-PT Relationship
3.2.3. Policy and the SSD-PT Relationship
3.2.4. The Aspects of Interest of the SSD-PT Relationship
The Time Component of the SSD-PT Relationship
The Potential of Flexibility in the SSD-PT Relationship
Decision-Making and the SSD-PT Relationship
3.2.5. The Impacts of the SSD-PT Relationship in Developing Countries
4. Avenues for Further Research
- The need for an integrated approach towards flexibility for decision-making
- The need for valuation of flexibility
- The need for a better understanding of the development of flexibility over time
- The role of flexibility in developing countries
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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Journal | Number of References (3 and more) |
---|---|
Journal of Transport Geography | 17 |
Urban Studies | 10 |
Transport Policy | 8 |
Transportation Research Part A | 7 |
Journal of Urban Economics | 7 |
Journal of the American Planning Association | 6 |
Habitat International | 6 |
Energy Policy | 5 |
Transport Reviews | 5 |
Sustainability | 4 |
Land Use Policy | 3 |
Transportation Research Part D | 3 |
Ecological Economics | 3 |
Research Method | Number of Papers (5 and more) |
---|---|
Analysis | 34 |
Literature review | 33 |
Model | 24 |
Comparison | 10 |
Case study | 9 |
Emperical Analysis | 8 |
Evaluation | 6 |
Discussion | 5 |
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Pennings, R.; Wiegmans, B.; Spit, T. Can We Have Our Cake and Still Eat It? A Review of Flexibility in the Structural Spatial Development and Passenger Transport Relation in Developing Countries. Sustainability 2020, 12, 6091. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12156091
Pennings R, Wiegmans B, Spit T. Can We Have Our Cake and Still Eat It? A Review of Flexibility in the Structural Spatial Development and Passenger Transport Relation in Developing Countries. Sustainability. 2020; 12(15):6091. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12156091
Chicago/Turabian StylePennings, Rogier, Bart Wiegmans, and Tejo Spit. 2020. "Can We Have Our Cake and Still Eat It? A Review of Flexibility in the Structural Spatial Development and Passenger Transport Relation in Developing Countries" Sustainability 12, no. 15: 6091. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12156091
APA StylePennings, R., Wiegmans, B., & Spit, T. (2020). Can We Have Our Cake and Still Eat It? A Review of Flexibility in the Structural Spatial Development and Passenger Transport Relation in Developing Countries. Sustainability, 12(15), 6091. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12156091