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Sustainable Urban Mobility in Developing Countries

Tipo
Course
Ubicación
Web-based
Fecha
-
Duración
12 Weeks
Área del programa
Governance, Local Development
Precio
400,00 US$
Correo Electrónico del Centro de Coordinación del Evento
e-dcp@unitar.org
Colaboración
GIZ
Inscripción
Public – by registration
Tipo de aprendizaje
E-learning
Idioma(s)
English
Protección de Datos y Privacidad
Los datos personales de los participantes que solicitan, se registran o participan en los cursos y otros eventos de UNITAR se rigen por la Política de Privacidad y Protección de Datos. Al solicitar, registrarse o participar en este evento, el participante reconoce que conoce dicha política y aceptan sus condiciones.

The rapid and often unplanned and uncoordinated growth of cities has seriously compromised existing transportation systems and significantly increased the challenge of creating new transportation systems, especially in developing countries. It is indeed in developing countries that the greatest growth in motor vehicles has been seen in the past few years and is expected in the future, primarily in urban areas. The environmental and social impacts are significant and directly related to quality of life and urban productivity. These impacts include congestion, energy consumption, air pollution, and traffic crashes. Thus, urban transportation issues are of foremost importance to support the mobility requirements in these growing cities and require new approaches. 

However, urban transport is a political rather than a technical issue. The technical aspects are relatively simple. The difficult decisions relate to the type of city we want and the way we want to live. Who is going to benefit from the models adopted? Do we dare to create a transport model different from that of the so-called advanced world cities? Do we dare create a transport system giving priority to the needs of the poor majority rather than the automobile owning minority? Are we trying to find the most efficient, economical way to move a city’s population, as cleanly and as comfortable as possible? Or are we just trying to minimize the upper class’s traffic jams? These questions are posed by Enrique Peñalosa, the former mayor of Bogotá (Columbia), who introduced a number of sustainable measures in his city.

 

This online course, based on the material jointly developed by GIZ and UNITAR, is designed to provide answers to the abovementioned questions, as well as solutions and alternative approaches in the area of urban transport planning that target a more sustainable transport system in Developing Cities.

 The course aims to enhance the capacity of local decision makers and urban and transportation planners to formulate and implement appropriate policies that contribute to sustainability in urban transport in developing countries. It allows an analysis of the important issues of sustainable transport including transport demand management, improved public and non-motorized transport, environmental protection, road safety, and gender in transport. In order to achieve sustainability, it also provides some means such as economic and financial instruments, institutional improvements, capacity building, regulation of markets and environmental standards.

Contents:

 

  • Module 1: Urban growth and strategies for sustainable development
  • Module 2: Municipal mobility management
  • Module 3: Public transport services
  • Module 4: Management, financing and institutions 
  • Module 5: Energy and environment
  • Module 6: Safety and social issues

 

The course is composed of 6 modules that are covered in a period of 12 weeks, corresponding to about 70 hours learning time. On average the course requires 6 hours of study time per week.

This 6-module course is based on UNITAR’s sound adult learning pedagogical principles. Each module includes readings, self-assessment activities and quizzes. Participants also engage in hands-on and collaborative tasks. They have to work on a case study, where they can apply their knowledge practically, as well as to do peer-reviews and participate in group discussions. The learning activities are distributed in such a way to ensure the achievement of the learning objectives in a flexible manner. All course activities are moderated by a high level transportation expert.

The course is open to urban and transportation planners, decision-makers from local governments as well as representatives of service providers (national governments, private sector, NGOs) and international organizations involved in the transport sector worldwide. It is advisable to have prior basic knowledge of urban transport and/or urban planning issues. Participants should also have access to a computer with a reliable Internet connection. 

Course Completion & Certification

Successful completion of the course requires participants to achieve a total score of at least 70% and entitles to a certificate of completion. A certificate of participation will be issued to participants who took all the exercises but achieved a final score inferior to 70%.

 

Technical Requirements

  •  Hardware: 64 MB of RAM, 1 GB of free disk space;
  •  MODEM: 56 K;
  •  Platform: Windows 95 or later versions, Mac OS 9 or OSx;
  •  A good internet connection is necessary
  •  Browser: IE, Mozilla Firefox, etc.;