Research Output
Varied perceptions of environmental impacts from informal public transport hubs in two sub-Saharan African cities (Nairobi and Ibadan)
  This paper explored perceptions of the environmental impacts of informal public transport (IPT) in Ibadan, Nigeria and Nairobi, Kenya. Based on a questionnaire survey supplemented by exploratory factor analysis the results revealed unanimous agreement that IPT hubs and the infrastructure around them are perceived as having adverse impacts on local people and their environment. There exist statistically significant differences on the perceptions, including the latent factors underpinning them, at city level and across respondent’s backgrounds. The findings imply significant scope for urban planning practice and policy-making to find systematic methods to integrate the knowledge about IPT’s perceived environmental impacts, from all urban citizens, as a means to pro-actively enhance their rights and inclusiveness. This will ameliorate a planning culture that often ignores the realities and concerns of the marginalised.

  • Type:

    Article

  • Date:

    01 October 2021

  • Publication Status:

    In Press

  • Publisher

    Inderscience Publishers

  • DOI:

    10.1504/ijesd.2021.10042403

  • Cross Ref:

    10.1504/ijesd.2021.10042403

  • ISSN:

    1474-6778

  • Funders:

    University of Dundee

Citation

Onyango, V., Olowosegun, A., & Moyo, D. (in press). Varied perceptions of environmental impacts from informal public transport hubs in two sub-Saharan African cities (Nairobi and Ibadan). International Journal of Environment and Sustainable Development, https://doi.org/10.1504/ijesd.2021.10042403

Authors

Keywords

informal public transport; IPT; environmental impacts; perceptions; Nairobi; Ibadan; urban planning

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