TPS launches new paper on influencing travel behaviour

smarter transport

The Transport Planning Society (TPS) has launched a new paper calling for a fundamental shift in how transport planning is approached across the UK. In ‘From understanding to influencing travel behaviour – if not now, then when?’, TPS argues that embedding behaviour change thinking in all aspects of the profession must no longer be a specialist consideration, but central to all that the profession does. Policies, plans and interventions that are not delivered in a way that resonates with their intended audience will only ever go so far in influencing travel behaviours.

 

Among the paper’s recommendations are:

  • Embedding behaviour change thinking into all transport planning education and qualifications, including the Transport Planning Professional (TPP) accreditation and master’s degrees.
  • Ensuring that behaviour change ‘activation’ is built into every infrastructure project, not just those explicitly branded as sustainable travel schemes.
  • Fostering greater collaboration between transport planners and other disciplines, such as behavioural science and marketing, to design more effectively.

 

To read the paper in full, please click here.

 

About the Transport Planning Society Policy Panel
 
The TPS Policy Panel was formed in November 2024 to:
  • Ensure TPS is influential and proactive in seeking improvements in policy and practice, and in setting the transport agenda at a national, regional and local level.
  • Be proactive in the creation of an open, diverse and inclusive transport planning community.
  • Provide the widest possible forum to engage on relevant and topical transport planning issues.
  • Improve the public understanding and the image of transport planning and transport planners, and promoting transport planning as a profession. 
 
The panel has five sub-groups, and this piece has been crafted by the Influencing travel behaviour group, led by Jon Foley. Other members of the group are Jack Hubert-Matthew, Dr Andy Binder, Rachel Rombough, Emma Hext, Chris Harte, Pete Dyson, Zahra Ali, Amy Young and Lucy Saunders.
 

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