RUSH HOUR: HOW 500 MILLION COMMUTERS SURVIVE THE DAILY JOURNEY TO WORK
Material type:
TextPublication details: UK HEAD OF ZEUS LTD 2014Description: 378ISBN: - 978-1-7818-5406-8
- 304.23/GAT
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Symbiosis Institute of Computer Studies and Research Fiction / Novel | 304.23/GAT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | COMMUTING - SOCIAL ASPECTS, TRANSPORTATION - SOCIAL ASPECTS, SOCIAL ECOLOGY | SICSR-B-19369 |
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| 232.4/NAR THE SECRET OF GOD'S SON | 294.408622/SID LEADING FROM THE HEART: SUFI PRINCIPLES AT WORK | 302.12/TAL SKIN IN THE GAME: HIDDEN ASYMMETRIES IN DAILY LIFE | 304.23/GAT RUSH HOUR: HOW 500 MILLION COMMUTERS SURVIVE THE DAILY JOURNEY TO WORK | 320.0954/KAN THE NEW ARTHASHASTRA: A SECURITY STRATEGY FOR INDIA | 324.2092/VER NARENDRA MODI: THE GAME CHANGER | 327.73054/RIE JFK'S FORGOTTEN CRISIS: TIBET, THE CIA, AND SINO-INDIAN WAR |
Each working day 500 million people across the planet experience the miracle and misery of commuting. Whether undertaken by car, bus, train or bicycle, the practice shapes our days and creates a time and a space for a surprisingly diverse range of activities. In RUSH HOUR, Iain Gately traces the past, present and future of commuting, from the age of Dickens to the potential of the driverless car. He examines the contrasting experiences of commuters in Britain and elsewhere in the world: from the crush-loaded salarymen of the Tokyo metro to the road-rage afflicted middle managers of America. Notwithstanding its occasional traumas, commuting emerges as a positive aspect of modern life. It has dictated the growth of cities; been proving ground for new technologies; and given countless people freedom of movement and the opportunity to improve their lives.
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