History and Future of Intermodal Mobilities

History and Future of Intermodal Mobilities

Organizer
The International Association for the History of Transport, Traffic and Mobility (T2M); Museo del Ferrocarril de Madrid (Madrid Railway Museum)
Venue
Railway Museum
Location
Madrid
Country
Spain
From - Until
15.11.2012 - 18.11.2012
Deadline
15.05.2012
By
Zirm, Manuel

T2M Conference - Madrid, 2012

The International Association for the History of Transport, Traffic and Mobility (T2M) announces the call for papers to be presented at its tenth annual conference, which will take place at the Museo del Ferrocarril de Madrid (Madrid Railway Museum) on 15-18 November 2012.

History and Future of Intermodal Mobilities

Physical mobility in societies and the economic growth of societies have been linked to the availability of means of transport and to their combination and coordination, particularly as a result of modernization and urbanization processes. Intermodal processes have always been inseparable from the movement of people and goods, and in any given historical period we find testimonies and documents that verify this continual close cooperation between transport and mobility. The constant presence of these interconnection and modal transfer phenomena led to the consolidation of routes and corridors, both of intercontinental and international scope and on a national, regional and local scale. All these processes have helped to shape complex and increasingly efficient transport systems, especially since the mid-nineteenth century, coinciding with the strong impetus for technological change provided by the onset of the industrial era.

Therefore, the phenomenon of intermodality did play an increasingly prominent role in transport activities, as each mode reached higher levels of speed, flexibility and technical efficiency, in stark contrast to the inertias that had existed in the characteristic transport system of the pre-industrial era.

The future of public transport in the last 100 years depended on good and easy intermodal mobility. While walking and driving may have allowed monomodal pointto-point travel, public transport by definition includes a transition between transport modes. Thus, transport planning in favour of public transport systems did face public expectation to provide intelligent intermobilites in order to support public transport modes.

The Madrid Conference seeks to analyse the processes of interconnection and integration among the different modes of transport from a historical perspective, and will therefore deal with the various aspects that converge therein: economic, social, institutional, political, technological, territorial and patrimonial. Consequently, the suggested research topics related to the concept of intermodality are the following:

- International and transnational intermodality and its technical, economic and political-administrative aspects
- Intermodality and migratory processes
- Intermodality in metropolitan cities and its effects on urban development and on transport demands and everyday travel habits
- The planning of intermodal complexes throughout history: projects, successes and failures
- Spaces for modal interchange: stations, airports, sea and river ports
- Technological consequences for modal interchange in the sea and river transport sphere: from stowage to container traffic
- Intermodality in the air traffic sphere. The airport within reach of the city and major intermodal hubs: from metropolitan connections to the emergence of highspeed lines.
- Light intermodality in large cities: the different ways in which users access the transport system (walking, cycling and driving to major intermodal hubs)
- Intermodality and environment

Although we are calling for the submission of thematic session proposals, papers and posters on the subject of intermodal transport in historical perspective, the Madrid Conference would like to continue to maintain a close collaboration among academics, students and professionals engaged in research and teaching activities in all fields of historical transport, traffic and mobility studies. Therefore, any submitted paper which explores the themes that are the leitmotifs of our association will be welcomed and assessed for their possible inclusion in the conference session schedule, although papers focusing on intermodality will be afforded preferential treatment by this scientific committee.

Deadline for the submission of papers

Papers must be sent to: submissions@t2m.org. The deadline for sending abstracts and an abbreviated CV (maximum of one page per paper: Word or Rich Text Format only) will be May 15, 2012.

The posters corresponding to all oral presentations will be exhibited in the public area of the Museo del Ferrocarril de Madrid. The specific instructions for the submission of posters will shortly be posted at www.t2m.org. Thematic session proposals must also include an one-page on their academic interest.

The Program Committee will assess all the proposals received as soon as possible and will reply to those concerned before June 15, 2012, thus allowing the selected to make their travel arrangements and to obtain any funding they may require. Graduates and doctoral students and participants from developing and emerging countries may apply to T2M for travel grants. The application forms are available at www.t2m.org

Deadline for the submission of definitive texts

Authors of papers which have been accepted will have until September 15, 2012 to submit their definitive texts. Once these texts have been accepted, they will be published in a restricted area for conference participants on the conference website and will form part of the Conference stick that will be distributed to all participants.

Individual presentations will be subject to a maximum time limit of 15 minutes in order to allow time for debate and discussion during the thematic sessions.

All participants are obliged to register and to pay the appropriate registration fee. For these details go to http://www.t2m.org

Programme Committee
Andrea Giuntini, University of Modena
Darina Martykanova, University of Potsdam
Massimo Moraglio, Berlin University of Technology
Francisco Polo Muriel, Madrid Railway Museum
Javier Vidal Olivares, University of Alicante
Advisory Committee
Hans-Liudger Dienel, T2M President, Berlin University of Technology
Ralf Roth, University of Frankfurt
Charissa Terranova, University of Texas
Local Organising Committee
Miguel Muñoz Rubio, Madrid Railway Museum
Lourdes Orozco Torres, Madrid Railway Museum
Francisco Polo Muriel, Madrid Railway Museum
Javier Vidal Olivares, University of Alicante

Programm

Contact (announcement)

Miguel Muñoz Rubio

Museo del Ferrocarril de Madrid Paseo de las Delicias, 61 28045 MADRID

fpolo@ffe.es

http://t2m.org/
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