What is it about?

This paper discusses the concept of ‘fairness’ in transport, specifically regarding women using public transport, future autonomous vehicle taxis or bicycle sharing. Women generally have varying and complex mobility patterns compared to men and suffer disproportionate fairness issues when using transport. Different concepts of fairness are explored, including: equality of opportunity, equity and justice (including procedural, social and distributional justice). While each of these concepts has different implications for women using transport, it is also recognized that fairness principles should apply to all people (regardless of sex, gender or other characteristics). Examples of public transport, autonomous vehicles and bicycle sharing arfe used to illustrate a variety of specific fairness issues. Factors such as safety and security, cost, physical design of infrastructure and vehicles, and characteristics such as low-income or childcare responsibilities arise in each case. The three cases also indicate a range of both horizonal fairness factors (similar people being treated similarly) and vertical fairness factors (such as more disadvantaged people receiving greater support).

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Why is it important?

It is important to improve gender equality for users of different types of transport.

Perspectives

Equality for all transport users is an important issues. This paper is one result from the EU Horizon funded project called 'Diamond' (grant agreement No. 824326).

Professor Emeritus Ronald McQuaid
University of Stirling

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: The Concept of Fairness in Relation to Women Transport Users, Sustainability, March 2021, MDPI AG,
DOI: 10.3390/su13052919.
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