Monday, April 4, 2011

World Streets Weekly: Edition of 4 April 2011


* * * Click here for Weekly Edition of 4 April 2011 * * *


- – - > To receive Weekly Editions freely in 2011: click here


This week's titles:



1 April: Stop press! Carsharing is apparently not dead after all.*

31 March: Carsharing is dead, long live . . . car rental?


29 March: Sempé: A Short History of Social Mobility

28 March: Are the telework, telecommuting guys way behind the curve?

28 March: World Streets Weekly: Edition of 28 March 2011

Also, see and interact with World Streets from different angles on . . .






Facebook Focus Groups (You will need to be logged in to access)

  1. Africa Streets – Click here

  2. Gatnet: Gender & transport – Click here

  3. Global South - Click here

  4. India Streets - Click here

  5. Journal of World Transport Policy and Practice - Click here

  6. New Mobility Café - Click here

  7. New Mobility Kids Network - Click here

  8. Nova Mobilidade - Click here

  9. Nuova Mobilità - Click here

  10. World Carshare Consortium - Click here

  11. World City Bike Forum - Click here

  12. World Rideshare - Click here

  13. World Rural Transport - Click here

  14. World Streets Sentinels - Click here

  15. World Telemobility - Click here

  16. World xTransit - Click here


Hands-on collaboration: With you and your city?

How can World Streets help support sustainable transport initiatives in your neighborhood, city, country, agency, or public interest or user group? Through special issues or supporting articles? Collaboration in support of conferences, projects, workshops, master classes, city dialogues? Local or other media programs? Cooperative programs or events with universities, NGOs, consultancies and schools?

This we will have to do together. So now all that remains to be done is to get you actively involved as a reader, subscriber, contributor, supporter and working partner so that in 2011 we can together go from strength to strength. Get in touch so that we can swap ideas concerning how to go about it.

Whoever said that the move to sustainable transport and sustainable cities was going to be easy?

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