编辑

IF 2.9 3区 工程技术 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES International Journal of Urban Sciences Pub Date : 2021-07-03 DOI:10.1080/12265934.2021.1956715
D. Janssens, C. Joh
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Indeed, mobility patterns and transport are simply a derived demand, i.e. derived from activities we do, and if society is to change fundamentally, also mobility will follow this evolution without any doubt. We are proud to present to you in this special issue a selection of seven papers, which went through a rigorous blind review process, nicely illustrating the aforementioned societal and behavioural changes due to COVID-19. A summary of the different contributions is mentioned below. In a first paper, Abbas Ziafati Bafarasat conducted a meta-analysis of COVID-19 lessons to primarily characterize the application of anticontagion strategies that are situated in their contextual specifications. To guide prior preparations for future application of pandemic management strategies, this paper nicely consolidates lessons learned in implementation of situated strategies and proposes preparations at the national level for elimination, at the local/community level for suppression, and at the regional level for mitigation. After that, the paper by Muhammad Ahsanul Habib and Md Asif Hasan Anik examined the long-term impacts of COVID-19 using an integrated transport and land-use modelling system. Specific behavioural attributes of households associated with and without a COVID-19 scenario are modelled and simulated up to year 2030 within an integrated transport, land-use and energy model. Apart from the metrological and technical contributions, the results of this study will offer transport and land-use planners insights into how households’ long-term decision making may evolve in the future due to the COVID-19 crisis and help develop policies to continue focusing on the sustainability goals for communities. In a first study from the United States, Hakan Yilmazkuday investigated the welfare costs of staying at home due to COVID-19 across socio-economic and demographic groups using daily census block group level data from the U.S.A. The empirical results provide evidence for significant heterogeneity across census block groups regarding the welfare effects of staying at home. This heterogeneity is further used to obtain measures of welfare changes for different socioeconomic and demographic groups at the national level. Furthermore, in a study conducted by Jody Liu, James Gross and Jaehyun Ha, GPS location data across 3108 counties in the U.S. mainland was used to assess the effects of income and supermarket availability on travel reduction during the COVID-19 pandemic. Specifically, the authors found the reduction of both frequency and distance of trips is negatively correlated to both median income and supermarket density. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

新冠肺炎大流行一直是(现在仍然是)一场全球健康危机,影响了我们许多人的生活。这场大流行不仅对医疗造成了巨大影响,而且对心理健康的影响还需要我们多年的时间才能全面了解。此外,后新冠肺炎时代的社会影响和行为模式仍然难以预测。几位学者认为,这场危机的余波预计将从根本上改变商业行业和客户的需求。考虑到这一点,《国际城市科学杂志》推出了一期特刊,内容涉及应对新冠疫情时活动和旅行的行为变化。事实上,流动模式和运输只是一种衍生的需求,即衍生自我们所做的活动,如果社会要发生根本性的变化,流动性也将毫无疑问地遵循这种演变。我们很荣幸在本期特刊中向您展示七篇论文,这些论文经过了严格的盲审过程,很好地说明了上述新冠肺炎导致的社会和行为变化。下文概述了不同的贡献。在第一篇论文中,Abbas Ziafati Bafarasat对新冠肺炎的教训进行了元分析,主要描述了背景规范中反接触策略的应用。为了指导疫情管理战略未来应用的前期准备工作,本文很好地总结了在实施情境战略中吸取的经验教训,并建议在国家一级为消除疫情、在地方/社区一级为抑制疫情和在区域一级为缓解疫情做准备。之后,Muhammad Ahsanul Habib和Md Asif Hasan Anik的论文使用综合交通和土地利用建模系统研究了新冠肺炎的长期影响。在交通、土地使用和能源综合模型中,对与新冠肺炎情景相关和不相关的家庭的具体行为特征进行建模和模拟,直到2030年。除了计量和技术贡献外,这项研究的结果将为交通和土地使用规划者提供关于家庭的长期决策在未来如何因新冠肺炎危机而演变的见解,并有助于制定政策,继续关注社区的可持续发展目标。在美国的第一项研究中,Hakan Yilmazkuday使用美国人口普查区块组层面的每日数据,调查了社会经济和人口统计群体因新冠肺炎而留在家中的福利成本。实证结果为人口普查区块组之间关于留在家中福利影响的显著异质性提供了证据。这种异质性被进一步用于衡量国家层面不同社会经济和人口群体的福利变化。此外,在Jody Liu、James Gross和Jaehyun Ha进行的一项研究中,美国大陆3108个县的GPS定位数据被用于评估新冠肺炎大流行期间收入和超市供应对旅行减少的影响。具体而言,作者发现旅行频率和距离的减少与收入中位数和超市密度呈负相关。作者得出结论,坚持呆在家里的个人选择较少依赖于封锁措施,更多地受到经济能力和获得必要商品和服务的影响。
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Editorial
The COVID-19 pandemic has been (and at this moment still is) a global health crisis which impacted the life of so many of us. Not only the medical footprint of this pandemic was enormous, also its mental-health fallout will take us many more years to understand in full detail. Also the societal impacts and behavioural patterns of the post COVID-19 era are still hard to foresee. Several scholars believe that the fallout of the crisis is expected to fundamentally change business industries and customers’ needs. With this in mind, the International Journal of Urban Sciences has launched a special issue related to the behavioural change of activities and travel in response to the pandemic disease. Indeed, mobility patterns and transport are simply a derived demand, i.e. derived from activities we do, and if society is to change fundamentally, also mobility will follow this evolution without any doubt. We are proud to present to you in this special issue a selection of seven papers, which went through a rigorous blind review process, nicely illustrating the aforementioned societal and behavioural changes due to COVID-19. A summary of the different contributions is mentioned below. In a first paper, Abbas Ziafati Bafarasat conducted a meta-analysis of COVID-19 lessons to primarily characterize the application of anticontagion strategies that are situated in their contextual specifications. To guide prior preparations for future application of pandemic management strategies, this paper nicely consolidates lessons learned in implementation of situated strategies and proposes preparations at the national level for elimination, at the local/community level for suppression, and at the regional level for mitigation. After that, the paper by Muhammad Ahsanul Habib and Md Asif Hasan Anik examined the long-term impacts of COVID-19 using an integrated transport and land-use modelling system. Specific behavioural attributes of households associated with and without a COVID-19 scenario are modelled and simulated up to year 2030 within an integrated transport, land-use and energy model. Apart from the metrological and technical contributions, the results of this study will offer transport and land-use planners insights into how households’ long-term decision making may evolve in the future due to the COVID-19 crisis and help develop policies to continue focusing on the sustainability goals for communities. In a first study from the United States, Hakan Yilmazkuday investigated the welfare costs of staying at home due to COVID-19 across socio-economic and demographic groups using daily census block group level data from the U.S.A. The empirical results provide evidence for significant heterogeneity across census block groups regarding the welfare effects of staying at home. This heterogeneity is further used to obtain measures of welfare changes for different socioeconomic and demographic groups at the national level. Furthermore, in a study conducted by Jody Liu, James Gross and Jaehyun Ha, GPS location data across 3108 counties in the U.S. mainland was used to assess the effects of income and supermarket availability on travel reduction during the COVID-19 pandemic. Specifically, the authors found the reduction of both frequency and distance of trips is negatively correlated to both median income and supermarket density. The authors conclude that individual choice in adherence to staying-at-home is less dependent on the lockdown measures and more influenced by financial capacity and access to necessary goods and services.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
6.90%
发文量
36
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