Maritime transport is one of the most ancient supports to human interactions across history and it still supports more than 90% of world trade volumes today. The changing connectivity of maritime networks is of crucial importance to port, transport, and economic development and planning. The way ports, terminals, but also cities, regions and countries, are connected with each other through maritime flows is not well-known and difficult to represent and measure, even for the transport actors themselves. There is a strong, urgent need for reviewing the relevant theories, concepts, methods, and sources that can be mobilized for the analysis of maritime networks.
With contributions from reputable scholars from all over the world, this book investigates the analysis of maritime flows and networks from diverse disciplinary angles going across archaeology, history, geography, regional science, economics, mathematics, physics, and computer sciences. Based on a vast array of methods, such as Geographical Information Systems (GIS), spatial analysis, complex networks, modelling, and simulation, it addresses several crucial issues related with port hierarchy; route density; modal interdependency; network robustness and vulnerability; traffic concentration and seasonality; technological change and urban/regional economic development. This book examines new evidence about how socio-economic trends are reflected (but also influenced) by maritime flows and networks, and about the way this knowledge can support and enhance decision-making in relation to the development of ports, supply chains, and transport networks in general.
This book is an ideal companion to anyone interested in the network analysis of transport systems and economic systems in general, as well as the effective ways to analyse large datasets to answer complex issues in transportation and socio-economic development.
Maritime Networks: Spatial structures and time dynamics (Routledge Studies in Transport Analysis) | César Ducruet (Editor) | Routledge
Table of Contents
Section I: Introduction to maritime network analysis
Chapter 1: Maritime flows and networks in a multidisciplinary perspective
Chapter 2: City-systems and maritime transport in the long term
Chapter 3: A geo-history of maritime networks since 1945
Chapter 4: Spatial networks
Section II: Modelling past maritime networks
Chapter 5: From oar to sail
Chapter 6: Venetian maritime supremacy through time
Chapter 7: Navigocorpus database and eighteenth-century French world maritime networks
Chapter 8: British and Japanese shipping networks in China in the 1920s
Chapter 9: Maritime shifts in the contemporary world economy
Section III: Topology and spatial distribution of maritime networks
Chapter 10: Time considerations for the study of complex maritime networks
Chapter 11: Maritime networks monitoring
Chapter 12: Cluster identification in maritime flows with stochastic methods
Chapter 13: Vulnerability and resilience of ports and maritime networks to cascading failures and targeted attacks
Chapter 14: The distribution functions of vessel calls and port connectivity in the global cargo ship network
Section IV: Maritime networks and regional development
Chapter 15: Impact of the emergence of direct shipping lines on port flows
Chapter 16: The mutual specialisation of port regions connected by multiple commodity flows in a maritime network
Chapter 17: Explaining international trade flows with shipping-based distances
Chapter 18: Interplay between maritime and land modes in a system of cities
Chapter 19: The regionalisation of maritime networks
Chapter 20: Co-evolutionary dynamics of ports and cities in the global maritime network, 1950-90