04024nam 22006855 450 991075138940332120251009073510.09789819972654(electronic bk.)978981997264710.1007/978-981-99-7265-4(MiAaPQ)EBC30789681(Au-PeEL)EBL30789681(CKB)28517191500041(DE-He213)978-981-99-7265-4(OCoLC)1404446191(EXLCZ)992851719150004120231016d2023 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierSelf-Organization and Mobility Deprivation of Poor Workers in Hong Kong and Singapore /by Joseph Cho-Yam Lau1st ed. 2023.Singapore :Springer Nature Singapore :Imprint: Springer,2023.1 online resource (247 pages)Quality of Life in Asia,2211-0569 ;18Print version: Cho-Yam Lau, Joseph Self-Organization and Mobility Deprivation of Poor Workers in Hong Kong and Singapore Singapore : Springer,c2023 9789819972647 Includes bibliographical references.Introduction -- Influence of Government Policies and Individual Decisions on the Commuting of Poor Workers in Hong Kong -- Impacts of Government Policies and Individual Decisions on the Commuting of Poor Workers in Singapore -- Neighbourhood Effects Influence the Commuting of the Poor in Deprived Urban Neighbourhoods of Hong Kong and Singapore -- Impacts of the Suburbanization Policy on the Spatial Mismatch Commuting of Workers in Hong Kong and Singapore -- Comparing Policies between Hong Kong and Singapore with a Focus on the Commuting of the Poor.This book focuses on the influence of socio-economic and land-use policies on the commuting problems and quality of life of the poor in Singapore and Hong Kong. It considers the influence of self-organisation: how the mobility of an individual is constituted by structures such as transport systems or socio-economic structural factors, as well as influenced by individual decisions. Where most transport studies focus on the influence of factors such as income inequality, the gender gap, and the built environment, this book fills a gap in paying particular attention to the influence of individual decisions on commuting. Given the prevalence of the former in research, government decision-makers are often constrained by these approaches and fail to understand the commuting problems of the poor. This book argues that the self-organisation approach provides some ideas that are outside the common conceptual framework in conventional transport planning and looks to improve mobility of lower-income commuters. Relevant to social science researchers working in areas such as urban planning and transport, mobility deprivation, and poverty, this book breaks new ground in quality of life studies in the Singapore and Hong Kong contexts.Quality of Life in Asia,2211-0569 ;18Sociology, UrbanWell-beingTransportationUrban policyPolitical planningUrban SociologyWell-BeingTransportation EconomicsUrban PolicyPublic PolicySociology, Urban.Well-being.Transportation.Urban policy.Political planning.Urban Sociology.Well-Being.Transportation Economics.Urban Policy.Public Policy.003.7Cho-Yam Lau Joseph1432806MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQ9910751389403321Self-Organization and Mobility Deprivation of Poor Workers in Hong Kong and Singapore3577829UNINA