An exploration of policy knowledge-seeking on high-volume, low-carbon transport
Findings from expert interviews in selected African and South-Asian countries
Abstract
This paper examines policy knowledge seeking among transport researchers and practitioners in a subgroup of nine Sub-Saharan African and South Asian countries. The policies in the countries investigated in this study recognise the need to reduce transport emissions, but this is rarely the measure that drives mobility interventions. Meeting the Paris Agreement targets will depend on whether low carbon, sustainable transport is rapidly and broadly implemented. Interviews with key informants include questions relating to motivations for seeking policy knowledge; the key policy knowledge that interviewees seek in order to shift country priorities or accelerate low-carbon development; and how best to share and access appropriate and relevant knowledge. These questions are drawn from the policy-transfer theory and processes described in the literature. Findings from the interviews suggest that key informants are aware of the prevalence and impact of uncritical, unsuccessful policy transfer, given their experiences with new transport measures in their countries; this is a significant lesson-learned. The value of context-specific transport policy transfer rather than off-the-shelf solutions is recognised by key informants, and appropriate policy knowledge is actively sought. A research gap exists to document an evidence-base regarding the influences and mechanisms that lead to successful low-carbon transport transfer processes in low-income countries.
This is an output of the High Volume Transport Applied Research Programme
Citation
Jennings, G., 2020. An exploration of policy knowledge-seeking on high-volume, low-carbon transport: findings from expert interviews in selected African and South-Asian countries, Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives, Volume 5, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trip.2020.100117