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Rural Transport In Developing Countries
Rural Transport In Developing Countries
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€179.80
A01=G. A. Edmonds
A01=I. Barwell
A01=J. De Veen
A01=J.D.G.F. Howe
agricultural supply chains
Animal Cart
Author_G. A. Edmonds
Author_I. Barwell
Author_J. De Veen
Author_J.D.G.F. Howe
Body Structure
Cart Manufacturers
Category=JHB
Co-operative Marketing Societies
Conventional Transport Planning
developing countries
developing world logistics
Diesel Engined Vehicles
Diesel Fuel
Diesel Oil
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Farm Equipment Manufacture
High Yielding Seed Varieties
infrastructure impact assessment
Integrated Agricultural Development Project
Kirinyaga District
Load Carrying Capacity
Local Transport System
Low Cost Vehicles
Motorized Vehicle
Pneumatic Tyres
Rock Crushing
rural access infrastructure evaluation
rural mobility solutions
Rural Road Network
Rural Transport
rural transport planning
Rural Transportation
Socio-economic Development
socio-economic policies
socioeconomic transport effects
traditional transport technology
transport policy analysis
Upolu Island
Village Roads
Western Samoa
Product details
- ISBN 9780367286415
- Weight: 460g
- Dimensions: 157 x 237mm
- Publication Date: 07 May 2019
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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For more than three decades investment in the transport sector has been a priority for developing country governments. With a few exceptions, roads have accounted for the major part of these investments. The explicit, and often articulated, assumption upon which the decision to allocate such large sums of money to road transport has been made is that road transport and development are inextricably linked. The implicit, and rarely articulated assumption is that the provision of suitable roads will lead to the operation of an adequate level of road transport services. If roads do not actually produce economic development, it has been argued, they certainly play a major role. This belief in the ben-eficial effects of roads is not wholly unsubstantiated. Clearly the provision of some form of access is vital for the development of the rural economy. Nevertheless, the studies carried out over the last 10-15 years on the impact of highway investment have sounded a cautionary note. George W. Wilson, writing in the concluding chapter of the Brookings Institution studies on transport and development, suggested that* 'A much more sceptical attitude towards transport appears essential and far more attention needs to be devoted to the set of circumstances surrounding expansion of transport capacity'. 1 The suggestion of a more restrained attitude reflected a growing concern that transport, and in particular roads, was only one factor amongst a large number that needed to be integrated for effective development. The concern to see road transport in a wider context partly explains the move towards the evaluation of the social, as well as strictly economic, benefits of road construction.
I. J. Barwell
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