Description

Book Synopsis

Drawing on comparative detail from Europe, North America, and the rest of the world, Driving Change provides a nuanced overview of the UK’s modern transport system and the role of business models and policy choices in its evolution. The common features of mobility and travel in developed economies are highlighted in order to provide a balanced appraisal of possible future developments.

The book offers a detailed consideration of the potential of new technologies – electric propulsion, digital platforms and autonomous vehicles – to offer solutions to the intractable challenges that accompany high levels of car ownership, as well as their likely impact on business and transport policy.

Driving Change is a rich analysis of the modern state of transportation and will be welcomed by students of transport studies and policy professionals tasked with developing infrastructure and the growth of the transportation industry.



Trade Review
Economic, demographic and technological changes point to the need for our transport system to evolve substantially in future, raising questions of how best to achieve this given the legacy of costly past investments. In this book David Metz offers new insights into how the system as a whole needs to adapt, and wise advice about how to bring this about. Efficient, clean transportation is fundamental to a healthy economy and society; anybody with an interest in it ought to read Driving Change. -- Diane Coyle, Bennett Professor of Public Policy, University of Cambridge
This timely and excellent book draws out the lessons from important changes in travel behaviour that others appear not to have noticed. We have stopped travelling further and faster as we continue to use the same amount of time. So it is digital platforms and transport management that are the challenges of the future, rather than the traditional models of how to save time. -- Bridget Rosewell, Chair, Driving and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA)
David Metz’s new book is a refreshing antidote to the sometimes breathless speculation about the potential impacts – good and bad – of new transport technologies, such as driverless cars, Mobility as a Service and digital platforms. His conclusion – which may surprise some – is that while these new technologies may have benefits if appropriately deployed, they are unlikely to have the transformative impact of earlier innovations like the railway, the private car – or the wheel itself. -- Ben Plowden, Transport for London
This book would be an ideal introductory textbook both in style and breadth. It encourages an intellectual inclusiveness leading to a model of modest scepticism. -- Phil Goodwin, Local Transport Today

Table of Contents

Introduction

Part I Transport Legacy

1. A system under stress

2. Twentieth-century travel

Part II Twenty-first century technologies

3. Electric vehicles

4. Digital navigation

5. Digital platforms

6. Autonomous vehicles

7. Trains, planes, buses and roads

8. Twenty-first century travel

Driving Change: Travel in the Twenty-First

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£24.99

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Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 7 Jan 2026.

A Paperback / softback by Professor David Metz

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    View other formats and editions of Driving Change: Travel in the Twenty-First by Professor David Metz

    Publisher: Agenda Publishing
    Publication Date: 06/08/2019
    ISBN13: 9781788211215, 978-1788211215
    ISBN10: 1788211219

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Drawing on comparative detail from Europe, North America, and the rest of the world, Driving Change provides a nuanced overview of the UK’s modern transport system and the role of business models and policy choices in its evolution. The common features of mobility and travel in developed economies are highlighted in order to provide a balanced appraisal of possible future developments.

    The book offers a detailed consideration of the potential of new technologies – electric propulsion, digital platforms and autonomous vehicles – to offer solutions to the intractable challenges that accompany high levels of car ownership, as well as their likely impact on business and transport policy.

    Driving Change is a rich analysis of the modern state of transportation and will be welcomed by students of transport studies and policy professionals tasked with developing infrastructure and the growth of the transportation industry.



    Trade Review
    Economic, demographic and technological changes point to the need for our transport system to evolve substantially in future, raising questions of how best to achieve this given the legacy of costly past investments. In this book David Metz offers new insights into how the system as a whole needs to adapt, and wise advice about how to bring this about. Efficient, clean transportation is fundamental to a healthy economy and society; anybody with an interest in it ought to read Driving Change. -- Diane Coyle, Bennett Professor of Public Policy, University of Cambridge
    This timely and excellent book draws out the lessons from important changes in travel behaviour that others appear not to have noticed. We have stopped travelling further and faster as we continue to use the same amount of time. So it is digital platforms and transport management that are the challenges of the future, rather than the traditional models of how to save time. -- Bridget Rosewell, Chair, Driving and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA)
    David Metz’s new book is a refreshing antidote to the sometimes breathless speculation about the potential impacts – good and bad – of new transport technologies, such as driverless cars, Mobility as a Service and digital platforms. His conclusion – which may surprise some – is that while these new technologies may have benefits if appropriately deployed, they are unlikely to have the transformative impact of earlier innovations like the railway, the private car – or the wheel itself. -- Ben Plowden, Transport for London
    This book would be an ideal introductory textbook both in style and breadth. It encourages an intellectual inclusiveness leading to a model of modest scepticism. -- Phil Goodwin, Local Transport Today

    Table of Contents

    Introduction

    Part I Transport Legacy

    1. A system under stress

    2. Twentieth-century travel

    Part II Twenty-first century technologies

    3. Electric vehicles

    4. Digital navigation

    5. Digital platforms

    6. Autonomous vehicles

    7. Trains, planes, buses and roads

    8. Twenty-first century travel

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