2010
DOI: 10.1080/01441640903298998
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Mobility, Poverty, and Gender: Travel ‘Choices’ of Slum Residents in Nairobi, Kenya

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Cited by 141 publications
(107 citation statements)
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“…The lack of publicly available and safe transport for women workers, especially those with low income, limits their labour force participation as this confines them to a smaller pool of potential employers and jobs and reduces their ability to bargain over and improve the terms and conditions of employment (Salon and Gulyani 2010;Dickerson 2002). Where caring responsibilities are not adequately met, the lack of available transport can only exacerbate women's dependency on a smaller set of job opportunities (Schwanen 2007;Mauch and Taylor, 1996;Preston and McLafferty, 1993).…”
Section: A M Ain Trends and Challenges In The Provision Of An Integrmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The lack of publicly available and safe transport for women workers, especially those with low income, limits their labour force participation as this confines them to a smaller pool of potential employers and jobs and reduces their ability to bargain over and improve the terms and conditions of employment (Salon and Gulyani 2010;Dickerson 2002). Where caring responsibilities are not adequately met, the lack of available transport can only exacerbate women's dependency on a smaller set of job opportunities (Schwanen 2007;Mauch and Taylor, 1996;Preston and McLafferty, 1993).…”
Section: A M Ain Trends and Challenges In The Provision Of An Integrmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The lack of rural roads and the poor quality of road infrastructure has been cited as a major constraint to agricultural production in East Africa (Salami, Kamara and Brixiova, 2010). However, the link between greater agricultural production and poverty elimination can be complicated by issues of land ownership and costs, employment and migration.…”
Section: Agricultural Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These auto-oriented strategies not only make it hard and unsafe for non-motorised modes to access cities (Gwilliam, 2003;Watson, 2014;WHO, 2015); they also lead to increased number of accidents that disproportionately affect non-motorised modes (WHO, 2015). These disadvantages ultimately lead to reduced accessibility to opportunities such as jobs, education and health services for those who cannot afford motorised modes (Diaz Olvera, Didier, Pochet, & Maidadi, 2012;Salon & Gulyani, 2010). The appropriateness and effectiveness of these auto-oriented transport planning strategies to generate positive social impacts for low income groups remains doubtful (Grieco, Ndulo, Bryceson, Porter, & McCray, 2009;Lucas, 2011;McCray, 2004;Watson, 2014).…”
Section: Unrelenting Exclusion Amid 'Progress' In Transportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, exclusion also takes a gender dimension. Cases have been reported where the most vulnerable women, children, the old, and physically disabled are constrained from making out-of-home trips due to poor road conditions (Diaz Olvera et al, 2013), unaffordability (Salon & Gulyani, 2010), and poor and unreliable public transport (UN-HABITAT, 2014). We therefore argue that richer results of exclusion could be obtained if the definition of transport exclusion in the context of these SubSaharan African cities incorporated these conditions.…”
Section: Contextualising Transport Exclusion In Sub-saharan African Cmentioning
confidence: 99%