complicated nevertheless, the concept has been influential in thinking about transportation planning. Increasing people’s space convergence seems desirable in that it implies a greater accessibility to places and more discretion for spending one’s time. We might question, however, the need forever space–time convergence and ever personal mobility. Transportation geographers among others have begun to ponder whether or not there is such a thing as too much mobility.
In
the African travel history, Ann Jon
‘Looking for Lovedu: Woman's Journey Through Africa, paints the history of travel across the continent as daunted with frustrations, see Fig from South Africa to Morocco which took extremely long [72]. Travelling across Africa is recorded as gruelling and dangerous and the travellers needed a friend and protector in the account of Klaus
Braun and Jacqueline Passon, in their book Across the Sahara Tracks, Trade and Cross
Exchange in Libya [73]. This situation has improved but is still a challenge as recorded by Porter and colleagues who discussed the young people’s
daily mobilities in the SubAfrica. Without a doubt, since the early s,
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