Comp. by: LElumalai Stage : Revises1 ChapterID: 9781405132879_4_T Date:31/3/09
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Suggested reading
Glick Schiller and Fouron (2001); Mitchell
(1997); Smith and Guarnizo (1998).
transport costs The total costs involved in
moving between two places, which in the case
of goods movements involves not only the
freight ratebut also the costs of documenta-
tion, packaging, insurance and inventory.
Transport costs are a central element in most
classicallocation theories, being presented
as a primary determinant of both agricultural
land use (seevon thu
..
nen model)andindus-
trial location theories,aswellasmosttheoriesof
spatial interaction(cf.distance decay): they
were at the heart of arguments for geography as
spatial science, or as a ‘discipline in distance’
(Watson, 1955: cf.locational analysis). rj
transport geography This field of study
focuses on the movement of people and goods,
the transportation systems designed to facili-
tate such movement, and the relationship
of transportation to other facets of human
geography such as economicdevelopment,
energy, land use, sprawl, environmental
degradation, values and culture. Long-
standing, strong ties with the fields of civil
engineering and economics have imbued
transport geography with a tradition ofquan-
titative methods, particularly the use of
mathematical models. These ties have at
once enabled transport analysts to respond to
pressing planning problems and tended to
limit the questions that transport geographers
ask, often directing attention towards tech-
nique and away from theory (Hanson, 2000).
Studies of the movement of people and
goods have sought to build predictive models
of the volume offlowsbetween places; these
models predict flows as a function of the
demandfor movement between nodes (usually
associated with various measures of node size)
and thecost of movement between nodes,
which in turn is related to distance, the mode
of travel (e.g. airplane, ship, automobile), and
the ease of movement,inter alia.Suchmodelsof
spatial interactionare important to a range of
actors including urban transportation planners,
who are responsible for providing transport fa-
cilities that will handle predicted flow volumes,
and commercial airlines, which must also pro-
vide sufficient capacity to meet predicted de-
mand. In transportation geography, the
linkages among modelling, prediction and plan-
ning have been exceedingly strong.
Studies of transportation systems have fo-
cused on patterns ofnetworksand nodes
and have often considered how these patterns
affect ease of movement and therefore shape
land-use and settlement patterns. In the USA,
the advent of the inter-state highway system,
beginning in the 1950s, led to the demise of
some places by-passed by the system and to
the growth of other places, whoseaccessibil-
itywas enhanced by connection to the inter-
state system (Garrison, Berry, Marble,
Nystuen and Morrill, 1959). More recently,
the deregulation of the airlines led to the
development of the hub-and-spoke system
that describes the current network of air travel
in the USA (O’Kelly, 1998); again, the network
configuration favours certain nodes (the hubs,
many of which have grown into thriving com-
mercial centres) to the detriment of others
(nodes at the extremities of the spokes, which
have seen their accessibility via air decline).
Transport systems studies have also examined
competition between and among modes (e.g.
trucking versus the railroads and waterways)
and between and among routes on the same
mode (e.g. among the multiple routes between
Chicago and the US east coast in the early
twentieth century). Of current interest is the
impact ofinternetcommerce on transport:
whereas such commerce might reduce the
number of person–trips, it has led to an enor-
mous increase in the demand for goods move-
ment (Aoyama, Ratick and Schwarz, 2006).
Transport is intimately related to a host of
issues that lie at the heart ofhuman geog-
raphy. energy consumption and environ-
mental degradation are just two that link
closely to the nature–society tradition in geog-
raphy. Because transportation systems are
designed to increase accessibility and accessi-
bility is central to land-use patterns and to
economic development, transport studies
have much to offer the field ofdevelopment.
valuesandculture, which are hugely import-
ant to understandings of transport patterns
and systems, have been mostly neglected by
transport geographers. sha
Suggested reading
Black (2003); Rodigue, Comtois and Slack
(2006).
transportation problem A special case of
linear programming, where the objective is
to find the minimum-cost solution that trans-
ports goods fromNorigins toMdestinations.
The supplies available at each origin and the
demands required at each destination define
the constraints, and the transportation prob-
lem assumes that each origin is directly
Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_T Final Proof page 773 31.3.2009 9:40pm Compositor Name: ARaju
TRANSPORTATION PROBLEMTRANSPORTATION PROBLEM