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Aviation Social and Economic Impacts [Kõva köide]

, (Loughborough University, UK)
As both an enabler and accelerator of globalisation, aviation has had profound and sometime unintended and unanticipated social and economic impacts. Commercial airports are not only transport nodes that facilitate aerial movement they are also major centres of employment but often sites of political contestation surrounding their planning and development as economic growth imperatives conflict with environmental concerns.

Noise is often cited as being one of the most socially contested aspects of airport operations for local communities, particularly when flights are operating during the night. This is a particular challenge for cargo operators whose business model is based on rapid overnight delivery and distribution. Specific factors including night noise curfews and the provision and co-location of freight forwarders are significant determinants of airport choice and this, in turn, leads to freight forwarding firms clustering at major freight facilities.

As well as meeting the mobility needs of business travellers and cargo consignors, air travel also facilitates the mass movement of leisure passengers. The benefits, challenges and limits to growth of this market segment are explored together with the social, economic and environmental challenges tourism creates for receiving countries. The role of airlines in planning, developing and marketing tourist destinations is also examined in this Volume. Aviation-led tourist development is particularly pronounced in cities such as Singapore and Dubai where air service deregulation and airport-airline-destination marketing strategies have created not only major international transit hubs but also significant centres of international urban tourism.

In addition to serving routes with high levels of passenger and cargo demand, aviation also performs a vital role for geographically remote and/or inaccessible regions that cannot be rapidly accessed by road, sea or rail. Owing to lower levels of demand, the need for small (and sometimes specially equipped aircraft) and the vagaries of the local weather and climate, these services are expensive to operate and may not be economically viable without subsidy. Experiences from the US and European Union examine some of the issues surrounding the operation of these services. The Volume concludes with consideration of aviations environmental impacts and potential mitigation strategies such as the EUs Emissions Trading System.
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(8)
Part I Airports and Economic Development
1 Kenneth Button and Samantha Taylor, `International Air Transportation and Economic Development', Journal of Air Transport Management, 6, 2000, 209-222
9(14)
2 Richard K. Green, `Airports and Economic Development', Real Estate Economics, 35, 1, 2007, 91-112
23(22)
3 Andrew R. Goetz and Joseph S. Szyliowicz, `Revisiting Transportation Planning and Decision Making Theory: The Case of Denver International Airport', Transportation Research Part A, 31, 4, 1997, 263-280
45(18)
4 Robert Freestone, `Planning, Sustainability and Airport-Led Urban Development', International Planning Studies, 14, 2, 2009, 161-176
63(16)
5 R L Ivy, T J Fik and E J Malecki, `Changes in Air Service Connectivity and Employment', Environment and Planning A, 27, 1995, 165-179
79(16)
6 David Gillen and Ashish Lall, `Competitive Advantage of Low-cost Carriers: Some Implications for Airports', Journal of Air Transport Management, 10, 2004, 41-50
95(12)
Part II Airport Logistics and Supply Chains
7 John Gardiner, Stephen Ison and Ian Humphreys, `Factors Influencing Cargo Airlines' Choice of Airport: An International Survey', Journal of Air Transport Management, 11, 2005, 393-399
107(8)
8 John Bowen and Thomas Leinbach, `Market Concentration in the Air Freight Forwarding Industry', Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, 95, 2, 2004, 174-188
115(16)
9 Anming Zhang and Yimin Zhang, `A Model of Air Cargo Liberalization: Passenger vs. All-cargo Carriers', Transportation Research Part E, 38, 2002, 175-191
131(18)
10 Yonghwa Park, Jung Kyu Choi and Anming Zhang, `Evaluating Competitiveness of Air Cargo Express Services', Transportation Research Part E, 45, 2009, 321-334
149(14)
11 John Gardiner and Stephen Ison, `The Geography of Non-integrated Cargo Airlines: An International Study', Journal of Transport Geography, 16, 2008, 55-62
163(10)
Part III Air Transport and Tourism
12 David Timothy Duval, `Critical Issues in Air Transport and Tourism', Tourism Geographies: An International Journal of Tourism Space, Place and Environment, 15, 3, 2013, 494-510
173(18)
13 Peter Forsyth, `Martin Kunz Memorial Lecture. Tourism Benefits and Aviation Policy', Journal of Air Transport Management, 12, 2006, 3-13
191(12)
14 Thomas Bieger and Andreas Wittmer, `Air Transport and Tourism---Perspectives and Challenges for Destinations, Airlines and Governments', Journal of Air Transport Management, 12, 2006, 40-46
203(8)
15 Guilherme Lohmann, Sascha Albers, Benjamin Koch and Kathryn Pavlovich, `From Hub to Tourist Destination - An Explorative Study of Singapore and Dubai's Aviation-based Transformation', Journal of Air Transport Management, 15, 2009, 205-211
211(8)
16 Anne Graham, `Demand for Leisure Air Travel and Limits to Growth', Journal of Air Transport Management, 6, 2000, 109-118
219(12)
Part IV Air Transport in Remote Regions
17 Svein Brathen and Nigel Halpern, `Air Transport Service Provision and Management Strategies to Improve the Economic Benefits for Remote Regions', Research in Transportation Business & Management, 4, 2012, 3-12
231(10)
18 Michael D. Wittman, Florian Allroggen and Robert Malina, `Public Service Obligations for Air Transport in the United States and Europe: Connectivity Effects and Value for Money', Transportation Research Part A, 94, 2016, 112-128
241(18)
19 Joan Calzada and Xavier Fageda, `Competition and Public Service Obligations in European Aviation Markets', Transportation Research Part A, 70, 2014, 104-116
259(14)
20 Rico Merkert and Basil O'Fee, `Efficient Procurement of Public Air Services---Lessons Learned from European Transport Authorities' Perspectives', Transport Policy, 29, 2013, 118-125
273(8)
21 Tony H. Grubesic, Timothy C. Matisziw and Alan T. Murray, `Assessing Geographic Coverage of the Essential Air Service Program', Socio-Economic Planning Sciences, 46, 2012, 124-135
281(14)
Part V Environmental externalities
22 Peter Morrell and Cherie H.-Y. Lu, `Aircraft Noise Social Cost and Charge Mechanisms - A Case Study of Amsterdam Airport Schiphol', Transportation Research Part D, 5, 2000, 305-320
295(16)
23 Murray May and Stuart B. Hill, `Questioning Airport Expansion---A Case Study of Canberra International Airport', Journal of Transport Geography, 14, 2006, 437-450
311(14)
24 Brian Graham and Jon Shaw, `Low-cost Airlines in Europe: Reconciling Liberalization and Sustainability', Geoforum, 39, 2008, 1439-1451
325(14)
25 Jan Vespermann and Andreas Wald, `Much Ado about Nothing? - An Analysis of Economic Impacts and Ecologic Effects of the EU-Emission Trading Scheme in the Aviation Industry', Transportation Research Part A, 45, 2011, 1066-1076
339(12)
26 Sgouris Sgouridis, Philippe A. Bonnefoy and R. John Hansman, `Air Transportation in a Carbon Constrained World: Long-term Dynamics of Policies and Strategies for Mitigating the Carbon Footprint of Commercial Aviation', Transportation Research Part A, 45, 2011, 1077-1091
351(16)
Index 367
Lucy Budd is Professor of Air Transport Management and Stephen Ison is Professor of  Air Transport Policy at De Montfort University, UK.