The Geography of Transport Systems
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Introduction Without transportation there would be no geography and without geography there would be no transportation. The Geography of Transport Systems (formerly known as "Transport geography on the web") is a project developed by Jean-Paul Rodrigue (Hofstra University), Claude Comtois (Universite de Montreal) and Brian Slack (Concordia University) (Credits) to promote access to transport geography information. Its purpose is to provide free and coherent pedagogical material to educators, researchers, students, and individual learners. It was specifically designed to support undergraduate courses in transport geography with a variety of media elements such as articles, maps, figures, exercises, GIS-T datatsets, and PowerPoint presentations. Specific sections can also be used for lectures in economic, urban and regional geography as well as in related disciplines. Educators are encouraged to include the material in their curriculum and to provide feedbacks. |
Key Divisions Concepts. Provide conceptual descriptions of a field of transport geography. Each chapter covers 3 to 5 concepts on average. See What is Transport Geography? for an example of a concept. Methods. Provide analytical and problem solving methodologies related to transport problems. See The Notion of Accessibility for an example of a method. Applications. Concerned about case studies pertaining to transport geography, such as International Oil Transportation.Multimedia Elements. Include PowerPoint slides, Detailed maps, databases, GIS-T datasets which can be downloaded for classroom use. A list of all the PowerPoint presentations contained in this Web site can be found here. |
Conditions
Copyright © 1998-2008, Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Dept. of Economics & Geography, Hofstra University

10th
Anniversary
(1998-2008)