Transforming Public Transportation Institutional and Business Models

Transforming Public Transportation Institutional and Business Models
Author: Tamar Henkin
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
Total Pages: 84
Release: 2012
Genre: Local transit
ISBN: 0309258693

" TRB's Transit Cooperative Research Program (TCRP) Report 159: Transforming Public Transportation Institutional and Business Models offers strategy for defining and implementing transformative change in institutional and business models, thus facilitating the operation and maintenance of public transportation systems. The report identifies the components of transformative change and examines potential consequences of change. " -- pub. desc.

Guidelines for Enhancing Suburban Mobility Using Public Transportation

Guidelines for Enhancing Suburban Mobility Using Public Transportation
Author: Transit Cooperative Research Program
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
Total Pages: 92
Release: 1999
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780309066129

Guidelines for enhancing suburban mobility: Overview and summary of findings -- Suburban transit services: The planning context -- Actions to modify and improve the overall suburban transit framework -- Circulators and shuttles -- Subscription buses and vanpools -- Summary: Lessons and conclusions -- Bibliography -- Appendix A: Classifying suburban environments.

Evaluation of the Use and Effectiveness of Wildlife Crossings

Evaluation of the Use and Effectiveness of Wildlife Crossings
Author: John A. Bissonette
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
Total Pages: 174
Release: 2008
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 0309117402

TRB¿s National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Report 615: Evaluation of the Use and Effectiveness of Wildlife Crossings explores development of an interactive, web-based decision guide protocol for the selection, configuration, and location of wildlife crossings.

Building Transit Ridership

Building Transit Ridership
Author: Charles River Associates
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
Total Pages: 168
Release: 1997
Genre: Transportation
ISBN: 9780309062527

Addresses transit's ridership and its share of the travel market. The research explored a variety of different public policies and transit management actions that can potentially influence transit ridership, particularly in comparison to local travel by private vehicle.

Housing Policy in the United States

Housing Policy in the United States
Author: Alex F. Schwartz
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 484
Release: 2014-08-07
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1135045232

The classic primer for its subject, Housing Policy in the United States, has been substantially revised in the wake of the 2007 near-collapse of the housing market and the nation’s recent signs of recovery. Like its previous editions, this standard volume offers a broad overview of the field, but expands to include new information on how the crisis has affected the nation’s housing challenges, and the extent to which the federal government has addressed them. Schwartz also includes the politics of austerity that has permeated almost all aspects of federal policymaking since the Congressional elections of 2010, new initiatives to rehabilitate public housing, and a new chapter on the foreclosure crisis. The latest available data on housing conditions, housing discrimination, housing finance, and programmatic expenditures is included, along with all new developments in federal housing policy. This book is the perfect foundational text for urban studies, urban planning, social policy, and housing policy courses.

Ensuring the Success of Latino Males in Higher Education

Ensuring the Success of Latino Males in Higher Education
Author: Victor B. Sáenz
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2023-07-03
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1000977277

Latino males are effectively vanishing from the American higher education pipeline. Even as the number of Latinas/os attending college has actually increased steadily over the last few decades, the proportional representation of Latino males continues to slide relative to their Latina female counterparts. The question of why Latino males are losing ground in accessing higher education—relative to their peers—is an important and complex one, and it lies at the heart of this book. There are several broad themes highlighted, catalogued along with the four dimensions of policy, theory, research, and practice. The contributors to this book present new research on factors that inhibit or promote Latino success in both four-year institutions and community colleges in order to inform both policy and practice. They explore the social-cultural factors, peer dynamics, and labor force demands that may be perpetuating the growing gender gap, and consider what lessons can be learned from research on the success of Latinas. This book also closely examines key practices that enable first generation Latino male undergraduates to succeed which may seem counterintuitive to institutional expectations and preconceived notions of student behavior. Using narrative data, the book also explores the role of family in persistence; outlines how Latino men conceptualize fulfilling expectations, negotiate the emasculization of the educational process, and how they confront racialization in the pursuit of a higher education; uncovers attitudes to help-seeking that are detrimental to their success: and analyzes how those who succeed and progress in college apply their social capital – whether aspirational, navigational, social, linguistic, familial, or resistant.While uncovering the lack of awareness at all levels of our colleges and universities about the depth and severity of the challenges facing Latino males, this book provides the foundation for rethinking policy; challenges leaders to institutionalize male-focused programs and services; and presents data to inform needed changes in practice for outreach and retention.