Border effects on the travel mode choice of resident and crossborder workers in Luxembourg

We investigate the travel mode choice behaviour of both resident and cross-border workers in Luxembourg. Two categories of mode choice are considered: sustainable (public transport) and unsustainable (single occupancy car use), which both depend on a large set of spatial and sociodemographic variabl...

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Main Authors: Julien Schiebel, Hichem Omrani, Philippe Gerber
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: TU Delft Open 2015-09-01
Series:European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
Online Access:https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/3098
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spelling doaj-b001d4421f3245a291f49cd3b3eda3122021-07-26T08:34:33ZengTU Delft OpenEuropean Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research1567-71412015-09-0115410.18757/ejtir.2015.15.4.30982711Border effects on the travel mode choice of resident and crossborder workers in LuxembourgJulien Schiebel0Hichem Omrani1Philippe Gerber2Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic ResearchLuxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic ResearchLuxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic ResearchWe investigate the travel mode choice behaviour of both resident and cross-border workers in Luxembourg. Two categories of mode choice are considered: sustainable (public transport) and unsustainable (single occupancy car use), which both depend on a large set of spatial and sociodemographic variables. In particular, we determine whether and how the borders of the four countries involved (Luxembourg, Belgium, France, Germany) affect this choice. The results of a classical binary logistic regression model show that significant variables depend on the area of residence and that some border effects are relevant in the context of the studied cross-border areas. Moreover, the identification of these various border-effect variables does not require the use of big data processing techniques. Therefore the proposed method can be applied generally to other cross-border areas with an open border context to highlight the effects of border on functional integration. This study is helpful in terms of developing a better understanding of the determinants involved in the use of sustainable transport modes and in supporting decisionmaking to improve transport planning.https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/3098
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julien Schiebel
Hichem Omrani
Philippe Gerber
spellingShingle Julien Schiebel
Hichem Omrani
Philippe Gerber
Border effects on the travel mode choice of resident and crossborder workers in Luxembourg
European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
author_facet Julien Schiebel
Hichem Omrani
Philippe Gerber
author_sort Julien Schiebel
title Border effects on the travel mode choice of resident and crossborder workers in Luxembourg
title_short Border effects on the travel mode choice of resident and crossborder workers in Luxembourg
title_full Border effects on the travel mode choice of resident and crossborder workers in Luxembourg
title_fullStr Border effects on the travel mode choice of resident and crossborder workers in Luxembourg
title_full_unstemmed Border effects on the travel mode choice of resident and crossborder workers in Luxembourg
title_sort border effects on the travel mode choice of resident and crossborder workers in luxembourg
publisher TU Delft Open
series European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
issn 1567-7141
publishDate 2015-09-01
description We investigate the travel mode choice behaviour of both resident and cross-border workers in Luxembourg. Two categories of mode choice are considered: sustainable (public transport) and unsustainable (single occupancy car use), which both depend on a large set of spatial and sociodemographic variables. In particular, we determine whether and how the borders of the four countries involved (Luxembourg, Belgium, France, Germany) affect this choice. The results of a classical binary logistic regression model show that significant variables depend on the area of residence and that some border effects are relevant in the context of the studied cross-border areas. Moreover, the identification of these various border-effect variables does not require the use of big data processing techniques. Therefore the proposed method can be applied generally to other cross-border areas with an open border context to highlight the effects of border on functional integration. This study is helpful in terms of developing a better understanding of the determinants involved in the use of sustainable transport modes and in supporting decisionmaking to improve transport planning.
url https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/ejtir/article/view/3098
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AT hichemomrani bordereffectsonthetravelmodechoiceofresidentandcrossborderworkersinluxembourg
AT philippegerber bordereffectsonthetravelmodechoiceofresidentandcrossborderworkersinluxembourg
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