Leveraging Urban Mobility Disruptions to Create Better Cities
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Brief Introduction
This course aims to bridge the knowledge gap between the dynamic on-the-ground reality brought on by technology innovation, academic content, and practice needed to respond systemically and more equitably to global urban challenges through new mobility disruptions.
Description
Over the next 8 sessions, this course will explore a wide variety of topics that relate to emerging new mobility systems and learn how new mobility can be leveraged to address and promote equity, improve health outcomes, and increase accessibility. The course material is designed to have a global impact by taking advantage of an established network of academic partners and practitioners, each bringing relevant expertise and representing distinct empirical settings. The international nature of this course will allow you to gain multiple social perspectives and familiarity with transportation challenges and solutions from different parts of the world.
Guided by the Shared Mobility Principles for Livable Cities and taught by transportation professors from Europe, Asia, Latin America, Africa, and the United States, the course provides insights into urban mobility challenges and opportunities and how the emerging new mobility paradigm can be effectively leveraged to create better, more equitable cities. The course is led by a team including Chris Zegras (MIT), Jinhua Zhao (MIT), Carlos Pardo (NUMO), and mobility entrepreneur Robin Chase, and features interviews with preeminent entrepreneurs, city planners, community development experts, and mobility justice advocates.
Topics will include land use and urban form, new mobility business models, pricing, policy, technology, and data. We will likewise reflect on the importance of designing new mobility systems for equity, health, and the environment. Additionally, this second edition of the course will also address questions of racial justice within the transportation field.
This course is recommended to professionals, government officials, and anyone else currently in the field of transportation or urban planning, but also is open to those interested in learning more about this topic.
The course team includes:
Chris Zegras, Ph.D., MIT
Robin Chase, M.S. (MIT), NUMO/Zipcar co-founder and former CEO
Natalia Barbour, Ph.D., MIT
Jinhua Zhao, Ph.D., MIT
Carlos Pardo, M.A. (LSE), NUMO
Francisco Pereira, Ph.D., Technical University of Denmark
Carlos Azevedo, Ph.D., Technical University of Denmark
Lynette Cheah, Ph.D., Singapore University of Technology and Design
Christo Venter, Ph.D., University of Pretoria (South Africa)
Ricardo Giesen, Ph.D., Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Andrew Salzberg, MUP (Harvard), Loeb Fellow at Harvard University, Former Head of Transportation Policy at Uber
Research Assistants who contributed to the production of this course: Anne Hudson, Fiorella Belli Ferro, and Ian Ollis.
Guest interviews:
Yolisa Mashilwane (Uber South Africa); Ben Plowden (Transport for London); Onesimo Flores, Ph.D. (Jetty co-founder); Oscar Diaz (former mayor's advisor Bogota); Angie Palacios (Development Bank of Latin America); Marina Moscoso (Despacio); Andrei Greenawalt, J.D. (Via); Evan Gastman (Uber); Assaf Biderman (Superpedestrian); Harriet Tregoning (NUMO); Kimberly Driggins (Washington Housing Conservancy); Karilyn Crockett, Ph.D. (City of Boston and MIT); Dara Baldwin (Center for Disability Rights); Norman Garrick, Ph.D. (University of Connecticut); and Michael Maness, Ph.D. (University of South Florida).
Knowledge
- You will learn definitions and concepts related to new mobility
- You will be able to critically evaluate new mobility disruptions
- You will gain knowledge about land use development, urban economics, and transportation pricing
- You will be able to differentiate between different business models and how to approach technology and data for new mobility
- You will gain knowledge about how human psychology can be used to change travel behavior through behavioral economics
- You will be able to inspect, evaluate, and identify transportation equity in a variety of global settings
- You will learn how to take action to mitigate the effects of transportation on climate change
- You will be ready to positively transform urban areas into sustainable, equitable, and joyful cities