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Partnerships to improve access and quality of public transport - A case report: Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

Author(s): Kombe, W.  |  Kyessi, A.  |  Lupala, J.  |  Mgonja, E.  |  University College of Lands and Architectural Studies, Tanzania  |  Sohail, M. (ed)

Publisher: WEDC
Place of publication: Loughborough University, UK
Year: 2003

Series: Partnerships and Public Transport
Collection(s): WEDC Bookshop

Price: £9.95
ISBN: 9781843800378

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This book presents findings from project R7786 Partnerships to improve access and quality of urban public transport for the urban poor carried out by the authors as part of the Knowledge and Research (KaR) programme of the Infrastructure and Urban Development Department, Department for International Development (DFID) of the British Government.

The purpose of the project was to identify, explore, and document critical issues in the provision of transport services for and in low-income settlements in developing countries. The identified issues can be used at policy and operational levels to provide better transport services to low-income communities in urban areas. In the research methodology, a sustainable livelihoods framework was used to set the research framework.

The city of Dar es Salaam has grown rapidly since the late 1940s. In the 1948 census the population was 69,227; by the census in 1957 it had grown to 128,742. During this period the city remained highly concentrated, with its boundaries on average less than five kilometres from the sea front or the then town centre. The growth has continued and the estimated population in 2000 was 2,286,730, with a continuing annual growth rate of about 4.5 per cent against the national average of 2.8 per cent.

Keywords:
Buguruni Mnyamani  |  Buses  |  Case studies  |  Charambe  |  Dar es Salaam  |  Mabibo  |  Private sector  |  Public transport