TY - BOOK ID - 134504533 TI - SUMP for Cities’ Sustainable Development AU - Burinskienė, Marija AU - Ušpalytė-Vitkūnienė, Rasa PY - 2021 PB - Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute DB - UniCat KW - sustainable urban mobility KW - SUMP KW - mobility measures KW - multicriteria decision making methods KW - MCDM KW - bus transportation system KW - urban infrastructure KW - network growth KW - Gini coefficient KW - complex systems KW - comprehensive traffic calming KW - active mobility KW - travel behaviour KW - quality of life KW - traffic safety KW - sustainable urban mobility planning KW - sustainable urban mobility plan KW - policy KW - problematisation KW - local transport KW - mobility plan KW - Sweden KW - Great Britain KW - Netherlands KW - Germany KW - development KW - autonomous cars KW - ITS and C-ITS KW - public infrastructure KW - Kendall method KW - pattern KW - social network analysis KW - tourist flow KW - visualization KW - Tibet UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:134504533 AB - In a rapidly changing world, it is necessary to increase the engagement of local authorities and stakeholders to make urban mobility cleaner and more sustainable. The best way is to combine great ideas and innovative measures with political support. This Special Issue consists of six articles analyzing the impact of SUMPs. Innovative measures have been proposed to change urban transport systems towards sustainability: Chinese research has analyzed the tourist flow of Tibet using innovative technologies: mobile phone data, visualizations using GIS, and social networks. Lithuanian authors proposed three autonomous car travel development concepts that should become a conceptual tool in the development of ITS and C-ITS. An English scientific paper is based on a review of local transport policy documents from 13 cities in four countries. Most cities seek to reduce car travel as a proportion of trips. Experience from Slovenia shows that the comprehensive traffic calming approach has positive effects and contributes to achieving sustainable mobility. Korean researchers used the GINI coefficient to evaluate the bus system to identify bus nodes in order of importance. The last article described that multicriteria decision-making methods have been successfully used for assessing the effectiveness of sustainable transport systems, and a universal evaluation model was proposed. ER -