"What Do Existing Household Surveys Tell Us About Gender and Transportation in Developing Countries?" in Transportation Research Board. Women's Issues in Transportation, Volume 2. Washington, DC

Access to affordable, reliable, and safe transportation is critical in improving the welfare of individuals in developing countries. Yet, transport data are limited overall, and data that address the different patterns of use by women and men are even scarcer. A few studies have shown, however,...

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Main Authors: Babinard, Julie, Scott, Kinnon
Format: Chapter
Language:en_US
Published: World Bank 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16949
id okr-10986-16949
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-169492021-04-23T14:03:33Z "What Do Existing Household Surveys Tell Us About Gender and Transportation in Developing Countries?" in Transportation Research Board. Women's Issues in Transportation, Volume 2. Washington, DC Babinard, Julie Scott, Kinnon household surveys gender transportation Access to affordable, reliable, and safe transportation is critical in improving the welfare of individuals in developing countries. Yet, transport data are limited overall, and data that address the different patterns of use by women and men are even scarcer. A few studies have shown, however, that women and men have different transport needs and constraints. Typically, analysis of these topics has been hampered largely by the costs involved in carrying out the large-scale transportation surveys needed to provide such data. There are household surveys, however, that can provide further insights into how women and men use transportation in the developing world. Four common household surveys—income and expenditure surveys, living standards measurement study surveys, demographic and health surveys, and multiple indicator cluster surveys—are reviewed to identify the extent to which they can provide transportation planners and researchers with relevant data. The results are mixed. Substantial data on one or two aspects of transportation, such as cost and mode used to visit education and health facilities, are available across countries; however, the surveys contain little information on other important factors, such as mode choice, security, and travel patterns. A marginal influence on surveys to expand the data collected on gender and transportation may be possible. Stand-alone transport surveys, however, will continue to be needed to foster the production of gender statistics in transportation in developing countries and the incorporation of gender differences into transport decisions. 2014-02-06T18:21:57Z 2014-02-06T18:21:57Z 2011 Chapter Transportation Research Board. Women's Issues in Transportation, Volume 2. Washington, DC 978-0-309-16083-4 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16949 en_US CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language en_US
topic household surveys
gender
transportation
spellingShingle household surveys
gender
transportation
Babinard, Julie
Scott, Kinnon
"What Do Existing Household Surveys Tell Us About Gender and Transportation in Developing Countries?" in Transportation Research Board. Women's Issues in Transportation, Volume 2. Washington, DC
description Access to affordable, reliable, and safe transportation is critical in improving the welfare of individuals in developing countries. Yet, transport data are limited overall, and data that address the different patterns of use by women and men are even scarcer. A few studies have shown, however, that women and men have different transport needs and constraints. Typically, analysis of these topics has been hampered largely by the costs involved in carrying out the large-scale transportation surveys needed to provide such data. There are household surveys, however, that can provide further insights into how women and men use transportation in the developing world. Four common household surveys—income and expenditure surveys, living standards measurement study surveys, demographic and health surveys, and multiple indicator cluster surveys—are reviewed to identify the extent to which they can provide transportation planners and researchers with relevant data. The results are mixed. Substantial data on one or two aspects of transportation, such as cost and mode used to visit education and health facilities, are available across countries; however, the surveys contain little information on other important factors, such as mode choice, security, and travel patterns. A marginal influence on surveys to expand the data collected on gender and transportation may be possible. Stand-alone transport surveys, however, will continue to be needed to foster the production of gender statistics in transportation in developing countries and the incorporation of gender differences into transport decisions.
format Chapter
author Babinard, Julie
Scott, Kinnon
author_facet Babinard, Julie
Scott, Kinnon
author_sort Babinard, Julie
title "What Do Existing Household Surveys Tell Us About Gender and Transportation in Developing Countries?" in Transportation Research Board. Women's Issues in Transportation, Volume 2. Washington, DC
title_short "What Do Existing Household Surveys Tell Us About Gender and Transportation in Developing Countries?" in Transportation Research Board. Women's Issues in Transportation, Volume 2. Washington, DC
title_full "What Do Existing Household Surveys Tell Us About Gender and Transportation in Developing Countries?" in Transportation Research Board. Women's Issues in Transportation, Volume 2. Washington, DC
title_fullStr "What Do Existing Household Surveys Tell Us About Gender and Transportation in Developing Countries?" in Transportation Research Board. Women's Issues in Transportation, Volume 2. Washington, DC
title_full_unstemmed "What Do Existing Household Surveys Tell Us About Gender and Transportation in Developing Countries?" in Transportation Research Board. Women's Issues in Transportation, Volume 2. Washington, DC
title_sort "what do existing household surveys tell us about gender and transportation in developing countries?" in transportation research board. women's issues in transportation, volume 2. washington, dc
publisher World Bank
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16949
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