Mass Motorization and Mass Transit

An American History and Policy Analysis

David W Jones author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Indiana University Press

Published:12th Mar '10

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Mass Motorization and Mass Transit cover

A brilliant analysis of the troubled history and uncertain future of mass transit

Mass Motorization and Mass Transit examines how the United States became the world's most thoroughly motorized nation and why mass transit has been more displaced in the United States than in any other advanced industrial nation. The book's historical and international perspective provides a uniquely effective framework for understanding both the intensity of U.S. motorization and the difficulties the country will face in moderating its demands on the world's oil supply and reducing the CO2 emissions generated by motor vehicles. No other book offers as comprehensive a history of mass transit, mass motorization, highway development, and suburbanization or provides as penetrating an analysis of the historical differences between motorization in the United States and that of other advanced industrial nations.

Jones ultimately attributes mass motorization to consumer preferences—for single- family home ownership, suburban living, and sun belt metropolises where low-density development and dispersed employment made automobiles essential.Vol. 96.2 September 2009

-- Thomas G. Andrews * University of Colorado Denver *

David Jones does a great job of dispelling myths that many of us hold about the advent of the automobile and the decline of public transit in the United States.

* publictransport.about.com *

Jones documents well the politics of postwar efforts by big city mayors to obtain federal aid for rail systems. . . . He provides good evidence for transit's very limited potential to solve the pressing problems of congestion, energy use, and global warming. . . . Highly recommended.March 2009

-- D. Brand * formerly, Harvard University *

In this sweeping history of urban transportation modernization and post-modernization in the United States, David Jones debunks popular explanations for the decline of mass transit and the rise of mass motorization. . . . offers a solid foundation for debating alternative theses that seek to account for technological change.Vol. 50 July 2009

-- Gregory Thompson * Technology and Culture *

This is a valuable and topical book which brings transport issues to the fore in American domestic and foreign policy. 43 2009

-- Margaret Walsh * University of Nottingh

ISBN: 9780253221711

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 454g

288 pages