About this Research Topic
The COVID-19 pandemic led to a surge of interest in walking and cycling as a safe and healthy way to travel. While cities across the world have reclaimed streets for walking and cycling, whether this renewed effort is likely to accelerate walking and cycling use and infrastructure remains a key question. This unusual moment allows us to explore these initiatives as well as assess progress in integrating them into urban planning in the Global South. In an age of climate change and mounting public health challenges, walking, cycling and public transport planning will be ever more important to get right.
Publications on walking and cycling in cities in the Global South are relatively limited compared to the Global North. Users looking for more information on this topic must therefore search hard to retrieve relevant publications. Though there are a few key publications that focus on walking and cycling in emerging countries, there are recent developments that have not been adequately covered. For example, the bicycle network in Bogota has been extended, and strategies for walking and cycling have recently been developed in Nairobi, Addis Ababa and Kampala. There are also several dissertations on this topic that are yet to be published for wider dissemination of findings.
This Research Topic aims to publish and disseminate research and experiences on the role of walking and cycling in enhancing accessibility in cities in the Global South. We invite submissions to focus on the following themes in the form of theoretical, empirical and methodological contributions:
• Methods, theories and conceptual models on walking and cycling.
• Travel behavior and experiences of walkers and cyclists, including enablers and barriers to walking and cycling, and gender dimensions in such experiences.
• Infrastructure for walking and cycling, including initiatives for pedestrianization and cycling during COVID-19.
• Governance, policies and strategies for walking and cycling.
• Walking and cycling policy change agents, including using walking and cycling to drive sustainable transport policy.
• Walking and cycling-related enterprises.
• Safety of walkers and cyclists.
• Walking and cycling in multi-modal transport planning.
This project is undertaken in collaboration with Volvo Educational and Research Foundations as part of their current preparation of new initiatives under the Future Urban Transport Programme.
Keywords: Walking, Cycling, Accessibility, Global South, Walking and Cycling Infrastructure, Travel Behavior and Experiences, Pedestrianization, Sustainable Transport Policy, Walking and Cycling Safety, Multi-Modal Transport Planning
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.