Author
Listed:
- Nsemba Edward Lenshie
- Christian Chukwuebuka Ezeibe
- Mark Ma’aku Joshua
- Chikodiri Nwangwu
Abstract
In most African states informal motorcycle transportation is a popular means of urban and semi‐urban mobility. While studies have examined the transportation–economic development nexus, the political economy of the ban of motorcycles and shift from informal commercial motorcycle to tricycle operation for urban/peri‐urban mobility in Nigeria has been grossly neglected in academic discourses. Using a qualitative approach and neoliberal political economy framework, this study investigates how the ban of commercial motorcycles and their replacement with commercial tricycles have impacted urban/peri‐urban mobility in Nigerian cities. Contrary to the expectation that replacing motorcycles with tricycles would increase the vulnerability of the majority of informal transport operators and constrain transportation of urban/peri‐urban poor without personal/private means of mobility, the replacement has facilitated the development of road infrastructure, reduced road crashes, minimized motorcycle induced crimes, and improved the income of informal transport operators in Nigerian cities. The study concludes that sustainable use of commercial tricycles for urban and peri‐urban transportation is relevant for achieving organized and safe informal commercial transportation in Nigeria and other less‐developed countries.
Suggested Citation
Nsemba Edward Lenshie & Christian Chukwuebuka Ezeibe & Mark Ma’aku Joshua & Chikodiri Nwangwu, 2022.
"From Motorcycle to Tricycle: Neoliberal Political Economy, Informal Transportation, and Urban/Peri‐Urban Mobility in Nigerian Cities,"
Transportation Journal, John Wiley & Sons, vol. 61(2), pages 195-227, March.
Handle:
RePEc:wly:transj:v:61:y:2022:i:2:p:195-227
DOI: 10.5325/transportationj.61.2.0195
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