ACCESS Magazine Wins APA California Award

APA California has announced that ACCESS magazine is the recipient of its 2014 Communications Initiative Award. APA California will officially announce the award at a special brunch ceremony on September 16 at its State Conference, to be held this year in Anaheim at the Disneyland Resort.

ACCESS reports on research at the University of California Transportation Center and presents it in a readable format so it useful for policy makers and planning practitioners. ACCESS  was started in 1993 by University of California Berkeley planning professor Mel Webber to bridge the gap between transportation research and policy.

Authors of academic research published in a professional journal may write an abridged version for publication in ACCESS. The magazine’s editors work with authors to translate academic, technical jargon into understandable, reader-friendly prose. The biannual publication has more than 8,500 subscribers from around the world and attracts more than 1,000 website visitors each month. Several ACCESS articles also have been translated and published in the Chinese journal, Urban Transport of China. After more than 20 years, ACCESS continues to help eliminate the gap between transportation research and policy makers.

To sign up for a for a free online subscription, visit uctc.net/access/subscribe. To find out more about ACCESS‘s other recent honors and awards, click here and here.

Recent Posts

The Mobility Lab/UCLA Light detection and ranging data from multiple connected and automated vehicles combined to create a single, large-scale perception map of the roadway

UCLA Mobility Center receives $2.5 million federal grant to advance cooperative perception technology

The CP-X initiative will develop systems that let vehicles, infrastructure and road users share real-time awareness to improve safety.

Daniel Hess speaks at a podium in UCLA’s Luskin Conference Center with a presentation slide behind him reading, “The Shoup Doctrine: Essays Celebrating Donald Shoup and Parking Reforms.” The audience is seated in front of him.

Easy reading, hard writing: “The Shoup Doctrine” honors Donald Shoup’s life and ideas

Hundreds gathered at UCLA for the launch of a new book honoring Shoup’s lasting legacy on parking policy and urban planning.

Featured Content

Honor Donald Shoup’s Legacy

Your gift supports the new Center for Parking Policy — so his vision for more livable cities thrives for decades to come.