

Host organisation:
Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Links:
The Centre's website
Conventional traffic research is primarily about transportation technology and refining models for understanding demand and travel patterns. “Our research focuses on the political-institutional level of transportation instead, where we identify institutional solutions to transportation problems. We are probably the only Centre in FUT that is focused on changing governance and management,” says Nicholas Low.
One research theme at the Centre is about innovations and barriers to change. The Centre is illuminating the path dependence of transportation institutions, which are locked into car and road-based solutions that stand in the way of adopting necessary new policies. “Key government agencies are doing what they have always done, in the way they have always done it. These ways are not well suited to tackling today’s key issues of climate change and peak oil. We believe that climate change is not only a result of market failures, as the Stern report claims, but just as much a failure of governance. We are trying to understand institutional histories so that they can adapt better to the environment of the twenty first century,” says Low.
The Centre’s vision is to create a society characterized by less dependence on fossil fuels, where private cars are less dominant and city planning is improved to avoid urban sprawl (the problem of cities growing without truly integrated planning for their expansion). “To avoid the spread of such unsustainable patterns to developing countries, we have to begin at home. Although we have good links with our East Asian region, GAMUT is strongly focused on solving problems in Australia. We cannot require that developing countries work with sustainable transportation systems before we’ve cleaned up our own act. That’s why our research focuses on cities whose transportation systems are highly dependent on cars. In this respect Australian cities have much in common with those of North America,” says Nicholas Low. The work at the Centre has three dimensions: pure research, advocacy, and education. The researchers come from disciplines such as town planning, engineering, political science, environmental management, and sociology. Five doctoral students are funded through GAMUT, and the Centre presently offers two courses in the Master of Urban Planning program, in addition to existing transport planning subjects. In the future GAMUT will offer a full major in Sustainable Transport in this Master’s Course, as well as training workshops for professionals.
In another sub-project, GAMUT is studying children’s independent mobility. Today children in Australia are as dependent on cars as their parents. One of the reasons is they are driven to school and other activities instead of, for example, walking or cycling. “One reason for this behavior is the lack of safe paths and places, bike lanes or sidewalks, necessary for them to be able to move independently,” says Nicholas Low.
In another project, researchers are analyzing Australia’s transportation budget. The purpose is to see how money is intended to be spent and how it is actually used. “We have discovered that budgets are far from transparent, which makes it difficult to see how money has been used. We are working to achieve better transparency and consultative processes that make it possible to ensure that budgeted funds are used correctly,” says Nicholas Low.
