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T-SUM
Transitions to Sustainable
Urban Mobility in Sub-Saharan Africa

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Partners
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Publications
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About T-SUM

Road building 

Car Parking 

Lower density 

Decentralisation

C

Car-Oriented
City 

Public transport 

Cycle networks 

Roadspace relocation 

M

Sustainable mobility city 

Public realm

Street activities 

Traffic restraint 

ToD/mixed use Developments

P

City of
places 

Hover for more 

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01 / Our vision

T-SUM is an interdisciplinary and cross-sector collaborative project that aims to identify the conditions under which pathways to sustainable and inclusive transport and land use development can be accelerated in growing cities in the Global South.

T-SUM is grounded in the observation that, in the context of still-low-but-rising levels of motorization, economic growth and increasing social and spatial inequalities, the formulation and implementation of policies, practices and partnerships that can support an accelerated implementation of sustainable mobility structures is an urgent concern for rapidly developing cities.

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02 / Objectives

1. To develop a conceptual framework based on alternative development trajectories for (un)sustainable urban transport, drawing on data from cities across the Global North and the Global South.

2. To assemble and co-produce evidence by interrogating urban transport and land use data in two rapidly developing cities in the region, Maputo and Freetown.

3. To initiate participative governance processes to foster new models of development based on a sustainable mobility trajectory, through evidence-based engagement with public and professional stakeholders across levels of governance and sectors.

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03 / Impact

T-SUM focuses on the co-production of knowledge between local and international partners in academia, government and the third sector to generate a conceptual framework, evidence base and practice experiences for accelerating sustainable and inclusive mobility development trajectories in Sub-Saharan African cities. 

One of our most important outcomes includes fostering new models of development based on a sustainable mobility trajectory through institutional and governance processes.

 
T-SUM's main beneficiaries will be the circa 3 million inhabitants from Maputo and Freetown and their periphery. We aim to expand the concepts and methods of this pilot study to other growing economies across the Global South.

Dr Clemence Cavoli introduces the T-SUM (Transitions to Sustainable Urban Mobility) project, an interdisciplinary and cross-sector collaborative project that aims to identify the conditions under which sustainable and inclusive transport and land use development can be accelerated in growing cities in the Global South.

About
Overview
Project overview
The Challenge

Cities in developing countries are faced with a choice of repeating the evolutionary mistakes of many of the cities in more developed countries, or ‘leapfrogging’ car-oriented mobility to directly develop more sustainable and liveable cities.

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Roger Teoh, Imperial/UCL 2016. UITP data 1995

The Team
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Peter Jones
Principal Investigator, 
UCL 
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Daniel Oviedo 
Co-Investigator,
Work Package Lead, 
UCL
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Joaquin Romero
de Tejada
Mozambique Project Manager,
WAZA
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Yasmina Yusuf
Project Research & Manager,
UCL
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Alexandria Chong
Research Assistant,
UCL
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Caren Levy 
Co-Investigator,
Work Package 4 Lead, UCL 
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Joseph Macarthy 
Freetown Co-Investigator, 
SLURC 
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António
Matos 
Mozambique Co-Investigator, Eduardo Mondlane University 
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Clemence Cavoli
Co-Investigator and Project Manager, UCL 
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Braima Koroma 
Freetown Project Manager, 
SLURC 
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Idelson
Mindo
Mozambique Research Assistant,
WAZA
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Amadu Labor
Freetown Research Officer, SLURC
Gessica Macamo
Maputo Research Assistant, OMT
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Shyantani Saha
Research Assistant,
UCL
Team
Contact
Get in Touch 
Email 
 
info@t-sum.org 
clemence.cavoli@ucl.ac.uk
daniel.oviedo@ucl.ac.uk
Tel
 
+44 (0)20 7679 5584
Office 
 
University College London 
Gower St, London WC1E 6BT
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