David M. Levinson

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David Matthew Levinson
Transportation,
InstitutionsUniversity of Sydney

David Matthew Levinson (born 1967) is an American

transportation analyst, a professor at the University of Sydney since 2017. He formerly held the RP Braun/CTS Chair in Transportation at the University of Minnesota, from 2006 to 2016.[1] He has authored or co-authored 8 books, edited 3 collected volumes, and authored or co-authored over 200 peer-reviewed articles on various aspects of transportation.[2] His most widely cited works [3] are on transportation accessibility and on the travel time budget. He has developed models of the co-evolution of transport and land use systems, demonstrating mutual causality empirically.[4] He is a founder of the World Society for Transport and Land Use Research.[5] In 1995 he was awarded the Charles Tiebout Prize in Regional Science by the Western Regional Science Association,[6] and in 2004, the CUTC-ARTBA New Faculty Award.[7] His travel behaviour research was featured in the book Traffic by Tom Vanderbilt
.

Levinson is the director of the Metropolitan Travel Survey Archive and founding editor of the Journal of Transport and Land Use. He is the founding editor of Findings.[8] He was also the chair of streets.mn,[9] a community blog dedicated to transport and land use issues in Minnesota, and WalkSydney,[10] a pedestrian advocacy organisation in Australia.

Books

Important papers

References

  1. ^ "Staff Profile".
  2. ^ "Experts@Minnesota, from Scopus". Archived from the original on 2013-09-29. Retrieved 2017-04-07.
  3. ^ Google Scholar Citations
  4. ^ Levinson, David (2008) Density and Dispersion: The Co-Development of Land use and Rail in London. Journal of Economic Geography 8(1) 55-57.
  5. ^ http://WSTLUR.org/about World Society for Transport and Land Use Research
  6. ^ Winners of the Charles M. Tiebout Prize in Regional Science
  7. ^ "Past CUTC Award Recipients" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-09-28. Retrieved 2013-09-26.
  8. ^ Findings Press.
  9. ^ streets.mn.
  10. ^ WalkSydney.

External links