Graham V. Currie
Graham V. Currie | |
|---|---|
| Occupations | Public transport researcher, policy advisor, and academic |
| Academic background | |
| Education | B.Sc., Geography M.Sc., Transport Studies Ph.D., Civil Engineering |
| Alma mater | Huddersfield University Cranfield University Monash University |
| Academic work | |
| Institutions | Monash University |
Graham V. Currie FTSE is a public transport researcher, policy advisor, and academic. He is a professor and chair at Monash University.
Currie's work has focused on public transport practice and strategy development. He contributed to a proposal for a Metro Tunnel, a concept intended to ease congestion in Melbourne, which opened in 2025. He is a fellow of the Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering and has been awarded the Transport Medal by Engineers Australia.
Education
[edit]Currie received a B.Sc. in Geography from Huddersfield University in 1982, followed by an M.Sc. in Transport Studies from Cranfield University in 1984. He later earned a Ph.D. in Civil Engineering from Monash University in 2011.[1]
Career
[edit]Following a career as a public transport consultant, Currie has been working as chair in Public Transport at Monash University since 2003.[1] He is the founder and director of the Public Transport Research Group at Monash University[2] and the founder of World Transit Research Clearinghouse.[3] He also holds Australia's first professorship in public transport at Monash University.[4]
Currie has advised the Victorian Office of the Auditor General,[5] and was elected president of the Australasian Transport Research Forum (ATRF).[6] Since 1996, he has been a specialist advisor to international agencies on transport planning for large-scale events.[2]
Research
[edit]Currie's research has examined public transport practice, equity, and service quality using analytical and policy approaches.
Public transport practice
[edit]Currie highlighted the need for the Metro Tunnel, an underground rail tunnel project to ease pressure on Melbourne's crowded public transport system,[7] which opened in 2025,[8] and provided the research foundation and design rationale that helped shape the project's eventual adoption.[9] He also offered analysis on the financial arrangements supporting public transport during the post-pandemic patronage downturn.[10] In related research, he demonstrated that fare evasion can be either intentional or accidental, and sometimes involves smaller acts like using a cheaper ticket when a higher fare is required.[11] He co‑developed a structural model that segments fare evaders into accidental, unintentional, calculated, and habitual groups to distinguish deliberate from unintended evasion.[12] He further showed that persistent evaders resist enforcement due to deeper economic or ideological factors.[13]
Transport equity and accessibility
[edit]Currie's research has focused on public transport planning and policy, with attention to accessibility,[14] service quality,[15] and addressing transport disadvantages for marginalized populations.[16] His books No Way to Go: Transport and Social Disadvantage in Australian Communities[17] and Handbook of Public Transport Research both examine how public transport systems intersect with broader social issues.[18] He has developed frameworks to measure and improve transport equity[19] while identifying regions with inadequate services.[20] In his book New Perspectives and Methods in Transport and Social Exclusion Research, he presented new methods and insights for analysing transport disadvantage and social exclusion, linking accessibility, well-being, and social justice.[21]
Transit service quality and network design
[edit]Currie's work has also analysed the broader international evidence that higher-quality transit service significantly increases use.[22] His regression analysis indicated that station-level service quality is the primary driver of rail passenger flows.[23] In a collaborative study, he showed that network design and transfer behaviour are linked[24] and that they influence transit performance, though broader network effects remain limited.[25] His analyses identified key factors influencing Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) ridership at system and route levels, highlighting both the importance and analytical complexity of service-supply variables due to potential endogeneity.[26]
Awards and honors
[edit]- 2012, 2016 – William W. Millar Award, US Transportation Research Board[27]
- 2017, 2021 – John H. Taplin Prize, Australasian Transport Research Forum[28]
- 2017 – Fellow, Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering[29]
- 2020 – Transport Medal, Engineers Australia[30]
Bibliography
[edit]Selected books
[edit]- Currie, Graham Victor; Gammie, Fergus; Waingold, Charles; Paterson, Darryn; Vandersar, Davinia (2005). Rural and Regional Young People and Transport - Improving Access to Transport for Young People in Rural and Regional Australia. Australian Government Dept of Family and Community Service. ISBN 9780975249857.
- Currie, Graham; Stanley, Janet Robin (2007). No Way to Go: Transport and Social Disadvantage in Australian Communities. Monash University Publishing. ISBN 9780980361629.
- Currie, Graham (2011). New Perspectives and Methods in Transport and Social Exclusion Research. Emerald Group Publishing Limited. ISBN 9781780522005.
- Currie, Graham (2021). The Handbook of Public Transport Research. Edward Elgar Publishing Limited. ISBN 9781788978651.
Selected articles
[edit]- Currie, Graham (2010). "Quantifying spatial gaps in public transport supply based on social needs". Journal of Transport Geography. 18 (1): 31–41. Bibcode:2010JTGeo..18...31C. doi:10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2008.12.002.
- Currie, Graham; Richardson, Tony; Smyth, Paul; Vella-Brodrick, Dianne; Hine, Julian; Lucas, Karen; Stanley, Janet; Morris, Jenny (2010). "Investigating links between transport disadvantage, social exclusion and well-being in Melbourne – Updated results". Research in Transportation Economics. 29 (1): 287–295. doi:10.1016/j.retrec.2010.07.036.
- Delbosc, Alexa; Currie, Graham (2011). "Using Lorenz curves to assess public transport equity". Journal of Transport Geography. 19 (6): 1252–1259. Bibcode:2011JTGeo..19.1252D. doi:10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2011.02.008.
- Delbosc, Alexa; Currie, Graham (2011). "The spatial context of transport disadvantage, social exclusion and well-being". Journal of Transport Geography. 19 (6): 1130–1137. Bibcode:2011JTGeo..19.1130D. doi:10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2011.04.005.
- Faisal, Asif; Yigitcanlar, Tan; Kamruzzaman, Md.; Currie, Graham (2019). "Understanding autonomous vehicles: A systematic literature review on capability, impact, planning and policy". Journal of Transport and Land Use. 12 (1). doi:10.5198/jtlu.2019.1405.
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Gaham Currie". ORCID. Retrieved 25 November 2025.
- ^ a b "Graham Currie - Monash University". Monash University. Retrieved 25 November 2025.
- ^ "Prof Graham Currie, Monash University" (PDF). Squarespace. Retrieved 25 November 2025.
- ^ "Monash to host 'world-leading' public transport research centre". Railexpress. 15 December 2015. Retrieved 5 December 2025.
- ^ "INDEPENDENT EXPERTISE CONSULTANCY" (PDF). Monash University. Retrieved 25 November 2025.
- ^ "About us". Australian Transport Research Forum. Retrieved 4 December 2025.
- ^ Silkstone, Dan; Millar, Royce (7 November 2005). "Call for 'tube' line underneath Melbourne". The Age. Retrieved 25 November 2025.
- ^ "Metro Tunnel Project overview". Victoria’s Big Build. Retrieved 11 December 2025.
- ^ "Metro Tunnel: Inside the research that became Melbourne's biggest transport project". Monash Lens. 27 November 2025. Retrieved 5 December 2025.
- ^ "Victoria government pays almost $500 million to shield Metro Trainis from pandemic fallout". The Age. 17 June 2025. Retrieved 5 December 2025.
- ^ Muñoz, Daniel; Lee, Kris; Plyushteva, Anna (2023). "Beyond fare evasion: the everyday moralities of non-payment and underpayment on public transport". Research in Transportation Economics. 19 (3): 345–362. doi:10.1080/17450101.2023.2240539 – via CrossRef.
- ^ Barabino, Benedetto; Lai, Cristian; Olivo, Alessandro (2020). "Fare evasion in public transport systems: a review of the literature". Public Transport. 12: 27–88. doi:10.1007/s12469-019-00225-w. hdl:11379/527612 – via Springer.
- ^ Escalona, Pablo; Brotcorne, Luce (2025). "Spot-fare inspection in urban bus transportation systems: strategy and unpredictability under a Stackelberg game approach". Public Transport: 2. doi:10.1007/s12469-025-00398-7. hdl:2268/336823 – via SpringerLink.
- ^ Stuart, A. L. (2019). "Exploring the equity performance of bike-sharing systems with disaggregated data: A story of southern Tampa". Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice. 130: 529–545. Bibcode:2019TRPA..130..529C. doi:10.1016/J.TRA.2019.09.048.
- ^ Engels, Benno (2011). "Social exclusion, location and transport disadvantage amongst non-driving seniors in a Melbourne municipality, Australia". Journal of Transport Geography. 19 (4): 985. Bibcode:2011JTGeo..19..984E. doi:10.1016/J.JTRANGEO.2011.03.007.
- ^ Kamruzzaman, Md.; Yigitcanlar, Tan; Yang, Jay; Mohamed, Mohd Afzan (20 July 2016). "Measures of Transport-Related Social Exclusion: A Critical Review of the Literature". Sustainability. 8 (7): 9. Bibcode:2016Sust....8..696K. doi:10.3390/su8070696.
- ^ "No Way to Go: Transport and Social Disadvantage in Australian Communities". WorldCat. Retrieved 4 December 2025.
- ^ "Handbook of public transport research". WorldCat. Retrieved 4 December 2025.
- ^ Halimi, Zahra; SafariTaherkhani, Mohammad; Cui, Qingbin (2024). "A Generalized Framework for Assessing Equity in Ground Transportation Infrastructure: An Exploratory Study": 9. arXiv:2409.19018 – via arXiv.
{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires|journal=(help) - ^ Malekzadeh, Ali; Chung, Edward (2019). "A review of transit accessibility models: Challenges in developing transit accessibility models". Review Articles. 14 (10): 18. doi:10.1080/15568318.2019.1625087 – via CrossRef.
- ^ "New perspectives and methods in transport and social exclusion research". WorldCat. Retrieved 25 November 2025.
- ^ Alam, Bhuiyan Monwar; Nixon, Hilary; Zhang, Qiong (14 October 2018). "Factors Affecting Travel Demand by Bus: An Empirical Analysis in the U.S. Metropolitan Statistical Area Level". Transportation Research Record. 2672 (8): 818. doi:10.1177/0361198118798714 – via Transportation Research Board.
- ^ Lin, Luzhou; Gao, Yuezhe; Cao, Bingxin; Wang, Zifan; Jia, Cai (2023). "Passenger Flow Scale Prediction of Urban Rail Transit Stations Based on Multilayer Perceptron (MLP)". Complexity. 2023: 2. doi:10.1155/2023/1430449.
- ^ Badia, Hugo (2020). "Comparison of Bus Network Structures in Face of Urban Dispersion for a Ring-Radial City". Networks and Spatial Economics. 20: 244. doi:10.1007/s11067-019-09474-5. Retrieved 24 November 2025.
- ^ Mulley, Corinne; Ho, Chinh (November 2013). "Evaluating the impact of bus network planning changes in Sydney, Australia". Transport Policy. 30: 2. doi:10.1016/j.tranpol.2013.07.003.
- ^ Ko, Joonho; Kim, Daejin; Etezady, Ali (7 March 2019). "Determinants of Bus Rapid Transit Ridership: System-Level Analysis". Journal of Urban Planning and Development. 145 (2) 04019004: 1. doi:10.1061/(ASCE)UP.1943-5444.0000506.
- ^ "William W. Millar Award". National Academies. Retrieved 10 December 2025.
- ^ "History of the ATRF". Australasian Transport Research Forum. Retrieved 10 December 2025.
- ^ "2017 Fellows" (PDF). Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering. Retrieved 25 November 2025.
- ^ "President's Prize" (PDF). Engineers Australia. Retrieved 25 November 2025.