Constraints to Women’s Use of Public Transport in Developing Countries, Part I : High Costs, Limited Access, and Lack of Comfort

This brief, the first in a two-part series, provides an overview of the evidence on key features of women’s travel behavior and the barriers they face in accessing public transport in developing countries, including affordability, frequency, covera...

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Main Author: Borker, Girija
Format: Brief
Language:English
English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099550408012242045/IDU05986e9020f68504b680bc3709f90291733e9
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37821
id okr-10986-37821
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-378212022-08-04T05:10:56Z Constraints to Women’s Use of Public Transport in Developing Countries, Part I : High Costs, Limited Access, and Lack of Comfort Borker, Girija EQUITY MOBILITY ACCESS TO SERVICES ACCESS TO MARKETS ACCESS TO EMPLOYMENT RURAL TRANSPORTATION URBAN TRANSPORTATION PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION VEHICLES TRAVEL WITH CHILDREN CROWDED TRANSPORT URBAN TRANSPORT COST This brief, the first in a two-part series, provides an overview of the evidence on key features of women’s travel behavior and the barriers they face in accessing public transport in developing countries, including affordability, frequency, coverage, and comfort. Women make more frequent, shorter trips with more stops along the way to combine multiple tasks. In contrast, men follow direct and linear routes. These patterns have important implications. As this brief shows, the cost and frequency of public transport affect women more than men, and given women’s income constraints, create trade-offs between travel and other economic opportunities. This brief also highlights how the current design of public transport does not accommodate the unique needs of women. Notably, coverage issues such as a poorly connected network, including last mile problems, limit women’s use of public transport and increase their reliance on private and informal modes of transport. Infrastructure design does not prioritize women’s comfort. Understanding the evidence on the challenges faced by women is a first step in identifying policies and interventions that could improve women’s accessibility. 2022-08-03T14:22:59Z 2022-08-03T14:22:59Z 2022-08-03 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099550408012242045/IDU05986e9020f68504b680bc3709f90291733e9 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37821 English en Global Indicators Briefs;No. 9 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Knowledge Notes :: Miscellaneous Knowledge Notes
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
English
topic EQUITY
MOBILITY
ACCESS TO SERVICES
ACCESS TO MARKETS
ACCESS TO EMPLOYMENT
RURAL TRANSPORTATION
URBAN TRANSPORTATION
PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION VEHICLES
TRAVEL WITH CHILDREN
CROWDED TRANSPORT
URBAN TRANSPORT COST
spellingShingle EQUITY
MOBILITY
ACCESS TO SERVICES
ACCESS TO MARKETS
ACCESS TO EMPLOYMENT
RURAL TRANSPORTATION
URBAN TRANSPORTATION
PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION VEHICLES
TRAVEL WITH CHILDREN
CROWDED TRANSPORT
URBAN TRANSPORT COST
Borker, Girija
Constraints to Women’s Use of Public Transport in Developing Countries, Part I : High Costs, Limited Access, and Lack of Comfort
relation Global Indicators Briefs;No. 9
description This brief, the first in a two-part series, provides an overview of the evidence on key features of women’s travel behavior and the barriers they face in accessing public transport in developing countries, including affordability, frequency, coverage, and comfort. Women make more frequent, shorter trips with more stops along the way to combine multiple tasks. In contrast, men follow direct and linear routes. These patterns have important implications. As this brief shows, the cost and frequency of public transport affect women more than men, and given women’s income constraints, create trade-offs between travel and other economic opportunities. This brief also highlights how the current design of public transport does not accommodate the unique needs of women. Notably, coverage issues such as a poorly connected network, including last mile problems, limit women’s use of public transport and increase their reliance on private and informal modes of transport. Infrastructure design does not prioritize women’s comfort. Understanding the evidence on the challenges faced by women is a first step in identifying policies and interventions that could improve women’s accessibility.
format Brief
author Borker, Girija
author_facet Borker, Girija
author_sort Borker, Girija
title Constraints to Women’s Use of Public Transport in Developing Countries, Part I : High Costs, Limited Access, and Lack of Comfort
title_short Constraints to Women’s Use of Public Transport in Developing Countries, Part I : High Costs, Limited Access, and Lack of Comfort
title_full Constraints to Women’s Use of Public Transport in Developing Countries, Part I : High Costs, Limited Access, and Lack of Comfort
title_fullStr Constraints to Women’s Use of Public Transport in Developing Countries, Part I : High Costs, Limited Access, and Lack of Comfort
title_full_unstemmed Constraints to Women’s Use of Public Transport in Developing Countries, Part I : High Costs, Limited Access, and Lack of Comfort
title_sort constraints to women’s use of public transport in developing countries, part i : high costs, limited access, and lack of comfort
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099550408012242045/IDU05986e9020f68504b680bc3709f90291733e9
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37821
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