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Wikipedia

Share taxi

A share taxi (also called shared taxi or taxibus) is a mode of transport which falls between a taxicab and a bus. These vehicles for hire are typically smaller than buses and usually take passengers on a fixed or semi-fixed route without timetables, but instead departing when all seats are filled. They may stop anywhere to pick up or drop off their passengers. Often found in developing countries,[1] the vehicles used as share taxis range from four-seat cars to minibuses.[2] They are often owner-operated.

A typical jeepney in Manila, the Philippines

In some terms share taxis can also be referred to as taxibuses since they play a role of taxis where the destination is selected by the rider as opposed to routed buses which travel on a route that is assigned by the transit operator.

Operation Edit

Terminus Edit

A given share taxi route may start and finish in fixed central locations, and landmarks may serve as route names or route termini. In some African cities routes are run between formal termini,[3] where the majority[4] of passengers board.[3] In these places the share taxis wait for a full load of passengers prior to departing, and off-peak wait times may be in excess of an hour.[3]

In other places there may be no formal termini, with taxis simply congregating at a central location,[5] instead.

Even more formal terminals may be little more than parking lots.[6]

In South Africa, the term "rank" denotes an area, specifically built for taxi operators by a municipality or city, where commuters may start and end their journey.[7]

Along the route Edit

Where they exist, share taxis provide service on set routes within and sometimes between towns.

After a share taxi has picked up passengers at its terminus, it proceeds along a semi-fixed route where the driver may determine the actual route within an area according to traffic condition. Drivers will stop anywhere to allow riders to disembark, and may sometimes do the same when prospective passengers want to ride.

Operational distinctions Edit

While all share taxis share certain characteristics—and many regional versions exhibit peculiarities—some basic operational distinctions can be delineated.

Vehicle ownership Edit

Most share taxis are operated under one of two regimes. Some share taxis are operated by a company. For example, in Dakar there are company-owned fleets of hundreds of car rapides.[8] In the Soviet Union, share taxis, known as marshrutka, were operated by state-owned taxi parks.[9] There are also individual operators in many countries. In Africa, while there are company share taxis, individual owners are more common. Rarely owning more than two vehicles at a time, they will rent out a minibus to operators, who pay fuel and other running costs, and keep revenue.[8]

Syndicates Edit

In some places, like some African cities and also Hong Kong, share taxi minibuses are overseen by syndicates, unions, or route associations.[10] These groups often function in the absence of a regulatory environment[3] and may collect dues or fees from drivers[11] (such as per-use terminal payments,[12] sometimes illegally), set routes,[12] manage terminals, and fix fares.[3] Terminal management may include ensuring each vehicle leaves with a full load of passengers.[3][12]

Because the syndicates represent owners, their regulatory efforts tend to favor operators rather than passengers,[12] and the very termini syndicates upkeep can cost delays and money for passengers as well as forcing them to disembark at inconvenient locations, in a phenomenon called "terminal constraint".[13]

Regulation Edit

In Africa, regulation is mainly something that pertains to the vehicle itself[14] not its operator[14] or its mode of operation.[citation needed]

In Kenya, regulation does extend to operators[15][16] and mode of operation (such as routes used)[citation needed] as well as the vehicle.[17]

As of 2008, African minibuses are difficult to tax,[11] and may operate in a "regulatory vacuum" perhaps because their existence is not part of a government scheme, but is simply a market response to a growing demand for such services.[8] Route syndicates[18] and operator's associations[13] often exercise unrestricted control, and existing rules may see little enforcement.[18]

Types of vehicle Edit

Share taxi is a unique mode of transport independent of vehicle type. Minibuses,[11] midibuses, covered pickup trucks, station wagons, and lorries see use as share taxis.

Certain vehicle types may be better-suited to current condition than others. In many traffic-choked, sprawling, and low-density African cities minibuses profit.[11]

In Israel they were mostly the largest model of Mercedes, owned generally by Arabs, and very efficient, having space for 7-8 people, and having loosely fixed routes, dropping a passenger either at a specific terminus or going a little out of the way to facilitate the passenger.

By country Edit

While carrying different names and distinguished by regional peculiarities, the share taxi is an everyday feature of life in many places throughout the world.

Africa Edit

Some Francophone African countries use the term taxi-brousse ('bush taxi', often spelled with a space rather than a hyphen in English[19]) for share taxis.[20]

Algeria Edit

In Algeria, taxis collectifs ply fixed routes with their destination displayed.[21] Rides are shared with others who are picked up along the way,[22] and the taxi will leave only when it seats all the passengers it can.[23] While stations, set locations to board and disembark, exist,[24][25] prospective passengers flag down a taxi collectif when they want a ride.[21]

Operating inter-[26][27] and intra-city,[citation needed] taxis collectifs that travel between towns may be called interwilaya taxis.[28]

Along with all forms of public transport in Algeria, the Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada recommend against using these share taxis.[22] The Irish Department of Foreign Affairs asks that you use taxis recommended by a hotel.[29]

Burkina Faso Edit

In Ouagadougou, capital of Burkina Faso, the share taxi or taxi brousse[30] role is not filled by the traditional African minibus.[8]

Democratic Republic of the Congo Edit

Those in Kinshasa, DRC, (or perhaps just the Kongo people) may call share taxis fula fula meaning "quick quick".[Thompson 1]

There was no independent transport authority in the city of Kinshasa as of 2008.[31]

Cameroon Edit

Share taxis do exist in Cameroon, but as of 2008 minibuses cannot be used for this purpose, by law.[8] That same year, Douala, Cameroon, also was without an independent transport authority.[31]

Egypt Edit

Egyptian share cabs are generally known as micro-bus (mekrobass ميكروباص or mašrūʿ مشروع, "project"; plural mekrobassāt ميكروباصات or mašarīʿ مشاريع). The second name is used by Alexandrians.

Micro-buses are licensed by each governorate as taxicabs, and are generally operated privately by their drivers. Although each governorate attempts to maintain a consistent paint scheme for them, in practice the color of them varies wildly, as the "consistent" schemes have changed from time to time and many drivers have not bothered to repaint their cars.

Rates vary depending on distance traveled, although these rates are generally well known to those riding the micro-bus. The fares also depend on the city. Riders can typically hail micro-buses from any point along the route, often with well-established hand signals indicating the prospective rider's destination, although certain areas tend to be well-known micro-bus stops.

Like the Eastern European marshrutka, a typical micro-bus is a large van, most often a Toyota HiAce or its Jinbei equivalent, the Haise, and the latter is produced by the Bavarian Auto Manufacturing Group in 6th of October City in Egypt. Smaller vans and larger small buses are also used.

Ethiopia Edit

Minibus taxis in Ethiopia are one of the most important modes of transport in big cities like Addis Ababa. They are preferred by the majority of the populace over public buses and more-traditional taxicabs because they are generally cheap, operate on diverse routes, and are available in abundance. All minibus taxis in Ethiopia have a standard blue-and-white coloring scheme, much as New York taxis are yellow. Minibus taxis are usually Toyota HiAces, frequent the streets. They typically can carry 11 passengers, but will always have room for another until that is no longer the case. The minibus driver has a crew member called a weyala whose job is to collect the fare from passengers.

In 2008, publicly operated public transport was available in Addis Ababa in addition to that provided by the minibuses.[32] A fleet of 350 large buses may operate for this purpose,[citation needed] as such a number does exist.[33] Also as of 2008, the city lacks an independent transport authority,[31] but some regulation, such as that controlling market entry, does exist.[13]

Route syndicates may be a presence but are described as "various".[10]

Ghana Edit

In Ghana and neighboring countries, tro tro are privately owned[34][35][36] minibus vehicles for hire that travel fixed routes[36] leaving when filled to capacity.[34][35] While there are tro tro stations,[36][37][38] these share taxis can also be boarded anywhere along the route.[34][35][36]

Operated by a driver and a conductor, who collects money, shouts out the destination, and is called a "mate",[36][39] many are decorated with slogans and sayings,[39] often religious,[34] and few operate on Sundays.[35] Tro tro are used by 70% of Ghanaian commuters.[40] This popularity may be because in cities such as Accra had only basic public transportation save for these small minibuses.[32] Following the creation of the Greater Accra Passenger Transport Executive, some large buses were brought into service, mainly Brazilian built Scanias with Marcopolo bodies. A Bus Rapid Transit system is being developed for opening in November 2019.[41] The Swedish company Scania has won the contract to not only supply the buses but also the infrastructure.[42]

An informal means of transportation, in Ghana they are licensed by the government, but the industry is self-regulated.[36] In Accra, syndicates include GPRTU and PROTOA.[10]

Ivory Coast Edit

In the Ivory Coast, gbaka is a name for minibus public transports.[10]

The transport regulator in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, is Agence de Gestion des Transports Urbains[31] or AGETU.[18]

As of 2008, Abidjan public transport was serviced by large buses as well as minibuses.[33]

Syndicates include UPETCA and SNTMVCI.[10]

Kenya (matatu) Edit

 
Riding in a Kenyan matatu – minibus size

In Kenya matatu or matatus (known as mathree in Sheng)[citation needed] are privately owned minibuses used as share taxis.[43] Often decorated, many matatu feature portraits of famous people or slogans and sayings.[44] Likewise, the music they play is also aimed at quickly attracting riders.[45] Over 70% of commuter trips are taken using matatu in cities like Nairobi.[46]

Although their origins can be traced back to the 1960s, matatu saw growth in Kenya in the 1980s and 1990s, and by the early 2000s the archetypal form was a (gaily decorated) Japanese microvan.[47] C. 2015, larger, bus-sized vehicles also started to be used as matatu. The name may also be used in parts of Nigeria.[48] In Kenya, this industry is regulated,[49] and such minibuses must, by law, be fitted with seatbelts[50] and speed governors.[51][50] Present regulation may not be sufficient deterrent to prevent small infractions[52] as even decoration may be prohibited.[51] Kenya has one of the "most extensive regulatory controls to market entry",[53] and a matatu worker can be pulled from the streets simply for sporting too loud a shirt.[54]

They may ply set routes,[55] display this route,[56] run from termini,[57][58] run both inter and intra-city,[55][59] and may stop along said route to purchase or collect money from passengers.[60] In addition to a driver, matatu may be staffed by a conductor,[61] locally known as a makanga or manamba or donda. As of 1999, they were the only form of public transport available in Nairobi, Kenya, although in 2006 and 2008 this was no longer the case. Over the years, stiff competition[62] is being experienced from bus-sharing applications such as SWVL.[63]

Madagascar Edit

 
Four taxi brousses at a station in Ambositra
 
Interior of a crowded taxi brousse

Madagascar's taxi brousses are a type of share taxi which, as of 2005, cost US$0.10 per passenger. They comprise a public transportation system that is relatively affordable in Madagascar's poverty.[64]: 61, 68  Most taxi brousses do not embark until all seats are full.[64]: 70  While taxi brousses use fixed stops, passengers can also exit at any point along the route.[64]: 73  Taxi brousse company fleets range in size from a single vehicle to over a hundred, and may serve one or more urban, regional, or national lines.[64]: 70  National lines travel from their origin to their destination directly, disallowing improvised stops along the route.[65] A vehicle is staffed by a driver and assistant driver, or two drivers on a very long route. Other people are employed to attract customers and fasten luggage to the vehicle's roof.[64]: 75 


Mali Edit

In Mali, at least two words for share taxi may have common currency sotrama and dourouni.[10]

As of 2008, Bamako, Mali, has no independent transport authority,[31] but share taxi activity could fall under regulator Direction de la régulation et du contrôle du transport urbain (municipal) or DRCTU control.[18]

Morocco Edit

In Morocco, grands taxis are the name for large, unmetered, shared taxicabs used for transportation between towns.[66] Grands taxis are generally old full-size Mercedes-Benz sedans, and seat six or more passengers.[66]

Nigeria Edit

The danfo share taxi and molue minibuses are iconic of transport in Lagos, Nigeria.

In Nigeria, both minibuses (called danfo[67]) and midibuses (molue)[10] may be operated as share taxis. Such forms of public transport may also be referred to as bolekaja, and many bear slogans or sayings.[Thompson 2]

Lagos, Nigeria, has a transport-dedicated regulator, Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Agency (LAMATA),[31] its remit most probably includes share taxi activity.[citation needed] Outside of Lagos, most major cities in Africa have similar systems of transport.[68]

Syndicates in Lagos may include National Union of Road and Transport Workers (NURTW).[10]

Rwanda Edit

Minibus public transports in Rwanda may be called coaster buses,[69] share taxis, or twegerane.[10] The latter could easily be a word meaning "stuffed" or "full".[69]

As of 2020 in Kigali, Rwanda, syndicates include RFTC, Kigali Bus Services and Royal express, all of these operating in Kigali but each province has got a couple of companies operating there as well.

 
Kigali Bus Services in Rwanda

South Africa Edit

 
Cape Town minibus taxi rank
 
Modern Toyota share taxi in Cape Town

Over 60% of South African commuters use shared minibus taxis (16 seater commuter buses), sometimes referred to as kombis.[70]

Many of these vehicles are unsafe and not roadworthy, and often dangerously overloaded.[70]

Prior to 1987, the taxi industry in South Africa was highly regulated and controlled. Black taxi operators were declined permits in the Apartheid era and all minibus taxi operations were, by their very nature, illegal.[70]

Post 1987, the industry was rapidly deregulated, leading to an influx of new minibus taxi operators, keen to make money off the high demand for this service. Taxi operators banded together to form local and national associations. Because the industry was largely unregulated and the official regulating bodies corrupt,[citation needed] these associations soon engaged in anti-competitive price fixing and exhibited gangster tactics – including the hiring of hit-men and all-out gang warfare.[71] During the height of the conflict, it was not uncommon for taxi drivers to carry shotguns and AK-47s to simply shoot rival taxi drivers and their passengers on sight.[citation needed]

Currently[when?] the South African Government is attempting to formalize and re-regulate the out-of-control minibus taxi industry. Along with new legislation, the government has instituted a 7-year recapitalization scheme to replace the old and un-roadworthy vehicles with new 18- and 35-seater minibuses. These new minibus taxis carry the South African flag on the side and are notably more spacious and safe.

Tanzania Edit

 
A dala dala in the city of Dar es Salaam

Minivans (minibuses may be a more correct term here) are used as vehicles for hire and referred to as dala dala in Tanzania.[72] While dala dala may run fixed routes picking up passengers at central locations, they will also stop along the route to drop someone off or allow a prospective passenger to board.[72] Before minibuses became widely used, the typical dala dala was a pick-up truck with benches placed in the truck bed.[73]

In Dar es Salaam, publicly operated minibus service may also exist as of 2008.[10]

Usually run by both a driver and a conductor,[72] the latter is called a mpigadebe, literally meaning "a person who hits a debe" (a 4-gallon tin container used for transporting gasoline or water). The name is in reference to the fact that conductors often hit the roof and side of the van to attract customers and to notify the driver when to leave the station.

These often-crowded[72] public transports have their routes allocated by a Tanzania transport regulator, Surface and Marine Transport Regulatory Authority (SUMATRA),[74] but syndicates also exist and include DARCOBOA.[10]

Tunisia Edit

 
Share taxi in Tunisia

Share taxis in Tunisia are called louage and follow fixed or semi-fixed routes, departing from stations when full.[75] Usually minibuses or compact cars,[75] although some louage are station wagons,[76] passengers may board and disembark at any point during travel.[75]

They run between towns and within cities.[75]

West Africa - Kia kia Edit

The term kia kia may be used in Yorùbáland to refer to minibus public transports, and means "quick quick".[Thompson 2]

Asia Edit

 
A public light bus (left) and a double-decker bus (right) in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong Edit

Public light buses (Chinese: 公共小型巴士), also known as minibus or maxicab (Chinese: 小巴), run the length and breadth of Hong Kong, through areas which the standard bus lines cannot or do not reach as frequently, quickly or directly.

Typically offering a faster and more efficient transportation solution due to their small size, limited carrying capacity, frequency and diverse range of routes, although they are generally slightly more expensive than standard buses, minibuses carry a maximum of 19 seated passengers. Standing passengers are not allowed.

There are two types of public light minibus, green and red. Both types have a cream-coloured body, the distinguishing feature being the colour of the external roof, and the type of service that the colour denotes: green is like regular transit bus with fixed number, route, schedule and fare (but generally not fixed stops); red is a shared taxi, operating on semi-fixed route unregulated, with the driver waiting for enough passengers to justify leaving, as his income depends on the revenue.

Cyprus Edit

In Cyprus, there are privately owned share taxis that travel to set destinations and board additional passengers en route called service taxis.[77]

India Edit

Shared taxis have been operating in Mumbai, India, since the early 1970s. These are point-to-point services that operate during peak hours. During off-peak hours they ply like regular taxis; they can be hailed anywhere on the roads and passengers are charged by the meter. During peak hours they will take a full cab load of passengers to a more or less common destination. The pick-up points are usually fixed, and sometimes (but not always) marked by a sign saying "shared taxis". Cabs typically line up at this point during peak hours.

They sometimes display their general destination on their windscreens, and passengers get in and wait for the cab to fill up. Once full the cab moves off. Fares are fixed and much lower than the metered fare to the same destination, but higher than a bus or train fare.

Such informal arrangements also exist in other Indian cities. Share jeeps are a common form of transportation in the Himalayas, the North Eastern States and elsewhere.[78]

Indonesia Edit

 
An Angkot in Jakarta

Angkutan Kota (lit.'city transport'), abbreviated as angkot, are share taxis in Indonesia widely operating throughout the country usually with microbuses. In some places there were also three-wheelers which are called bemo (such as autorickshaws based on the Daihatsu Midget) but phased out. The older version of Angkot is called oplet. The name of this transportation differs from each different province or area in the country. In Jakarta, it is called angkot or "mikrolet", in other parts such as in Sulawesi, the term mikrolet (shortened "mikro") is more widely used especially in Manado. In Makassar it is called "pete-pete", in Malang it is called "angkota", in Medan it is called "sudako", in Aceh it is called "labi-labi".

Share taxis operated across rural/village routes are called angkutan desa (lit.'village transport'), abbreviated as angkudes. Angkot and angkudes runs accordingly with its exact routes and may stops at any class of bus stations (A, B, and C-Type bus stations).[79] Additionally, passengers can stop the van anywhere according to its destination, and is not required to stop at a bus stop.[80]

Iran Edit

 
Sharing ajans in Tehran

In Iran a share taxi is usually called "taxi", while a non-share is called "ajans"/اژانس, pronounced [aʒans]. Four passengers share a taxi and sometimes there is no terminus and they wait in the street side and blare their destination to all taxies until one of them stops. These are regular taxies but if somebody wants to get a non-share taxi he can call for an ajans (taxi service) for himself or wait in the street side and say "Darbast" (which means non-share). It means he is not interested in sharing the taxi and is consequently willing to pay more for the privilege.

Minibuses, in the past years, with a capacity of 18 passengers, and nowadays van taxies, with a capacity of 10 passengers are other kinds of share transport in Iran.[81]

Israel Edit

 
Sherut taxis

In Hebrew: מונית שירות monit sherut, pl. Hebrew: מוניות שירות moniyot sherut is a word meaning "service taxi". Referring to vans or minibuses[82][83][84] that serve as share taxis in Israel, these can be picked up from anywhere on their route.[82] They follow fixed routes[82][83] (sometimes the same routes as public transport buses[82]) and usually leave from the initial station only when full.[82][85] Moniyot sherut operate both inter-[83][86] and intra-city.[83] Payment is often done by passing money to the driver in a "human chain" formed by the passengers seated before. The change (and the receipt, when requested) are returned to the person who paid by the same means. In intra-city routes, where they compete with official buses, the drivers usually coordinate their travel by radio so that they can arrive at the bus station just before public transport buses and take the most passengers.

Monit sherut are one of the only forms of transit accessible to many Israelis during Shabbat, as most public transportation in the country closes down between sunset on Friday and sunset on Saturday.

The Philippines Edit

 
UV Express vehicle in Metro Manila

The most popular means of public transportation in the Philippines as of 2007,[87] jeepneys were originally made out of US military jeeps left over from World War II[88] and are known for their color and flamboyant decoration.[87] Today the jeepneys are built by local body shops from a combination of prefabricated elements (from handful Filipino manufacturers) and improvisation and in most cases equipped with "surplus" or used Japanese SUV or light truck engines, drive train, suspension and steering components (from recycled vehicles in Japan).

They have not changed much since their post-war creation, even in the face of an increased access to pre-made vehicles, such as minibuses.[citation needed] However, due to the government's Public Utility Vehicle Modernization Program, Jeepneys and other modes of transportation must comply to the newer Philippine National Standards which is more compliant with international standards.

Older jeepneys have the entrance on the back, and there is space for two people beside the driver (or more if they are small) while the modern jeepneys have two doors on the right side of the vehicle. The back cab of the Jeepney is equipped with two long bench seats along the sides and the people seated closest to the driver are responsible for passing the fare of new passengers forward to the driver and the change back to the passenger. The start and end point of the jeepney route is often a jeepney terminal, where there is a queue system so only one jeepney plying a particular route is filled at a time, and where a person helps the driver to collect fares and fill the vehicles with people, usually to more than comfortable capacity.

Preferring to leave only when full and only stop for a crowd of potential passengers,[89] riders can nonetheless disembark at any time;[90] and while jeepneys ply fixed routes,[87] these may be subject to change over time.[91] New ones may need approval from a Philippine transport regulator.[92] Jeepney stations do exist.[93]

Another share taxi that is also common in the Philippines is the UV Express which uses Compact MPVs and vans as its form factor. These vehicles seat 10-18 people and charges additional 2 Philippine peso per kilometer (as of 2013).

Thailand Edit

Literally "two rows"[citation needed] a songthaew or song thaew[94] (Thai สองแถว, Lao: ສອງແຖວ [sɔ̌ːŋtʰíw]) is a passenger vehicle in Thailand[94] and Laos[95] adapted from a pick-up[95] or a larger truck and used as a share taxi. They are also known as baht buses.

Turkey and Northern Cyprus Edit

 
Karsan-built Peugeot J9 Premier dolmuş in Bodrum, Turkey

In Turkey and Turkish-controlled Northern Cyprus dolmuş (pronounced "dolmush") are share taxis that run on set routes within and between cities.[96] Each of these cars or minibuses displays their particular route on signboards behind the windscreen.[96]

Some cities may only allow dolmuş to pick up and disembark passengers at designated stops, and terminals also exist.[96] The word derives from Turkish for "full" or "stuffed", as these share taxis depart from the terminal only when a sufficient number of passengers have boarded.[97] Visitors to Turkey have been surprised by the speed of dolmuş travel.[98]

These share taxis are also found in Turkish-controlled, Northern Cyprus under the same name.[97] Traveling intra and inter-city, the privately owned minibuses or aging Mercedes stretch limos are overseen by a governance institution; routes are leased and vehicles licensed.[97] Passengers board anywhere along the route (you may have to get the driver to stop if he doesn't honk at you) as well as at termini and official stations.[97] Dolmuş in Turkish-controlled, Northern Cyprus display their routes but don't follow timetables. Instead, they simply appear frequently.[97]

West Bank Edit

Share taxis are often called "ser-vees" (service taxi) in the West Bank. Minibuses are often used in lieu of vans. Ford Transit vans were often a popular vehicle for conversion,[99] resulting in the generic trademark "Ford" and "Fordat"(pl) being used to describe minibuses of various makes, replacing aging Mercedes sedans.[83]

Oceania Edit

New Zealand Edit

In New Zealand the first widespread motor vehicle services were shared taxi services termed service cars; a significant early provider was Aard, operating elongated Hudson Super Sixes.[100] By 1930 there were 597 service cars.[101] Aard was taken over by New Zealand Railways Road Services in 1928.[100] Shared taxis in New Zealand nowadays are referred to as Shuttles or Shuttle vans (see below).

New Zealand - Shuttle bus or van Edit

 
A shuttle van service to Dunedin International Airport picks up a passenger at Dunedin Railway Station in New Zealand
 
New Zealand traffic sign for a shuttle stop

Shared buses or vans are available in many more developed countries connecting frequent destinations, charging a fixed fee per passenger. The most common case is a connection between an airport and central city locations. These services are often known as shuttles. Such services usually use smaller vehicles than normal buses, and often operate on demand. An air traveller can contact the shuttle company by telephone or Internet, not necessarily in advance; the company will ensure that a shuttle is provided without unreasonable delay. The shuttle will typically connect one airport with several large hotels, or addresses in a specified area of the city. The shuttle offers much of the convenience of a taxi, although taking longer, at a price which is significantly lower for one or two passengers. Scheduled services between an airport and a hotel, usually operated by the hotel, are also called shuttles.

In many cases the shuttle operator takes the risk of there not being enough passengers to make the trip profitable; in others there is a minimum charge when there are not enough passengers.[102]

Usually there are regulations covering vehicles and drivers; for example in New Zealand under NZTA regulations, shuttles are only allowed to have up to eleven passenger seats, and the driver must have a passenger endorsement (P) on their drivers' licence.

Europe Edit

Estonia Edit

Share taxis in Estonia are mostly found in Tallinn, the capital.[citation needed] Called liinitakso, marsruuttakso, taksobuss or mikroautobuss depending on the language spoken, these minibuses run fixed routes and allow passengers to disembark at any time.[103]

Greece Edit

In Athens, Greece most taxis were share taxis,[104] but since the country joined the EU this tradition started to disappear.

Former Soviet Union Edit

 
Marshrutka in Moscow, Russia

Marshrutka[105][106] or marshrutnoe taksi[107] (Russian and Ukrainian: маршру́тка [mɐrˈʂrutkə], from marshrutn[oy]e taksi; plural marshrutki) or routed taxicab, are share taxis found in Eastern Europe and the republics of the former Soviet Union.[108] Usually vans, they drive along set routes, depart only when all seats are filled, and may have higher fares than buses.[105][106][108] Passengers can board a marshrutka anywhere along its route if there are seats available.[106][108]

Fares are usually paid before the marshrutka leaves; riders nearer the driver are responsible for handing up the other passengers' fares and passing back change.[108][109]
 
Four marshrutkas in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan

Lithuania Edit

In Lithuania, share taxis are called maršrutinis taksi.

Netherlands Edit

Besides the conventional deeltaxi, there are treintaxis in some Dutch towns. Operated on behalf of the Netherlands Railways,[citation needed] they run to and from railway stations and the ride is shared with additional passengers picked up along the way.[110] Tickets can be purchased at railway ticket offices or from the cabdriver,[110] but treintaxis must be ordered by phone unless boarding at a railway station.[110]

United Kingdom Edit

In 2018 Arriva launched shared taxi service Arriva Click in Liverpool and Sittingbourne and Kent Science Park in the United Kingdom.[111]

Northern Ireland Edit

In some towns in Northern Ireland, notably certain districts in Ballymena, Belfast, Derry and Newry, share taxi services operate using Hackney carriages and are called black taxis. These services developed during The Troubles as public bus services were often interrupted due to street rioting. Taxi collectives are closely linked with political groups – those operating in Catholic areas with Sinn Féin, those in Protestant areas with loyalist paramilitaries and their political wings.

Typically, fares approximate to those of Translink operated bus services on the same route. Service frequencies are typically higher than on bus services, especially at peak times, although limited capacities mean that passengers living close to the termini may find it difficult to find a black taxi with seats available in the rush hour.

Switzerland Edit

Major providers of mobility services as MOD Mobility On Demand and/or Collective Taxi in Switzerland are Telebus Kriens LU, Taxito, myBuxi, Kollibri by Swiss Postal Bus, and Pikmi by VBZ Verkehrsbetriebe Zurich ZH.

Most providers as TNC Transportation Network Companies run single-source mobility platforms for the service and/or are connected with multi-modal mobility platforms of Public Transit (= Collective Traffic) and city administration / community organization.[citation needed]

North America Edit

Barbados Edit

Most areas of Barbados are served by ZRs, which run in addition to the government-run bus service.

Dominican Republic Edit

In the Dominican Republic, these privately owned vehicles[112] run fixed routes[113][112] with no designated stops, and the ride is shared with other passengers.[113]

Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada advises against traveling in Dominican Republic carros públicos because doing so makes passengers targets for robbery, and because the taxis are known to, "disregard traffic laws, often resulting in serious accidents involving injuries and sometimes death."[114] The US Department of State also warns that using them is hazardous, as passengers often have their pockets picked, and are sometimes robbed by the drivers themselves.[112]

Haiti Edit

 
A Haitian tap tap

Tap taps, gaily painted buses[115][116] or pick-up trucks,[116] and publiques, usually older saloon cars,[117] serve as share taxis in Haiti.

Tap taps are privately owned and beautifully decorated.[115] They follow fixed routes;[118] won't leave until filled with passengers;[116][118] and many feature wild colors, portraits of famous people, and intricate, hand-cut wooden window covers.[115] Often they are painted with religious names or slogans.[Thompson 3] Riders can disembark at any point in the journey.[116][118] Their name refers to "fast motion".[Thompson 4]

The publiques operate on fixed routes and pick up additional passengers all along the way.[117]

While saying not to use any form of public transport in Haiti, the Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada advises against tap tap travel especially.[119] The US State Department also warns travelers not to use tap taps, "because they are often overloaded, mechanically unsound, and driven unsafely."[120]

Saint Lucia Edit

In Saint Lucia, waychehs are a name for minibus public transports using Toyota HiAce.

Canada Edit

In Quebec, share taxis or jitneys are called taxis collectifs[121] (in English "shared taxis"[122]) or transport collectif par taxi[123] (which the STM translates in English as "taxibus"[124]) and are operated by subcontractors to the local transit authorities on fixed routes.[125][126] Google translate renders "transport collectif par taxi" as "public transport by taxi".[127]

In the case of the Montréal the fare is the same as local bus fare, but no cash and transfers are issued or accepted;[128] in case of the STL only bus passes.[122] The Réseau de transport de Longueuil accepts regular RTL tickets and all RTL and some Réseau de transport métropolitain TRAM passes.[129]

Guatemala Edit

In Guatemala, ruleteros, minibus share taxis, pick up and discharge passengers along major streets.[130][131]

United States Edit

Jitney is an American English term that originally referred to a vehicle for hire intermediate between a taxi and a bus.[132] It is generally a small-capacity vehicle that follows a rough service route, but it can go slightly out of its way to pick up and drop off passengers. In many US cities (e.g. Pittsburgh and Detroit), the term jitney refers to an unlicensed taxi cab.

The name comes from an archaic, colloquial term for a five-cent piece in the US (the nickel). The common fare for the service when it first came into use was five cents, so the "five-cent cab" or "jitney cab" came to be known for the price charged.

In Rhode Island a jitney license plate is used for all public passenger buses, even for larger ones.

 
Jitney in Atlantic City, United States in 2008

While jitneys became fairly common in many other countries, such as the Philippines, they first appeared in the United States and Canada. The first US jitneys ran in 1914 in Los Angeles, California. By 1915, there were 62,000 nationwide. Local regulations, demanded by streetcar companies, killed the jitney in most places. By the end of 1916, only 6,000 jitneys remained.[133] Similarly, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, in the 1920s, jitneys competed directly with the streetcar monopoly operating along the same routes as the streetcars, but jitneys were charging lower fares.[134] Operators were referred to as "jitney men." They were so successful that the city government banned them at the request of the streetcar operators.

Since the 1973 oil crisis (as well as the mid-20th-century decline in transit service), jitneys have reappeared in some areas of the US, particularly in inner city areas once served by streetcars and private buses. An increase in bus fares usually leads to a significant rise in jitney usage. Liberalization of jitneys is often encouraged by libertarian urban economists, such as University of Chicago's Richard Epstein, Rutgers' James Dunn, and USC's Peter Gordon, as a more "market-friendly" alternative to public transportation. Concerns over fares, insurance liabilities, and passenger safety have kept legislative support for jitneys decidedly tepid. Nevertheless, in New York City and northern New Jersey, jitneys (known as "dollar vans" because of their original price) are regulated.

Miami has the country's most comprehensive jitney network, due to Caribbean influence. In Atlanta jitneys run along Buford Highway.

In Atlantic City the ACJA operates a jitney service that travels the main strip of casinos. One of the routes also services the new cluster of casinos west of Atlantic City proper.

In 2009, the Houston Waves, Houston's first jitney service in 17 years, started running. It has expanded into a network of buses operating within Loop 610 and to all special event venues in Houston.

Latin America Edit

In Puerto Rico, “carros públicos” (literally "public cars") are share taxis.[135] Carros Publicos set routes with several passengers sharing the ride[136] and others picked up throughout the journey.[135]

The industry is regulated by the Puerto Rico Public Service Commission.[5]

While these cars do travel inter-city, they may not be available for longer, cross-island travel.[5] Stations may exist in cities, and Puerto Rican carros públicos may congregate in specific places around town.[5]

Mexico Edit

Along with traditional bus and minibus routes in some areas that the regular size buses couldn't fit due to the road and street height and width with small size. but they are regulated in standard minibuses fare depending the state and city of the country.

South America Edit

Argentina Edit

Colectivos operated as share taxis from the late 1920s until the 1950s in Buenos Aires, Argentina when they were integrated into the public transportation system. Vehicles still known as colectivos operate throughout the country, but have long been indistinguishable from buses.[137]

Chile, Peru and Guatemala Edit

 
Taxis Colectivos of different lines in Talca, Chile

Often share taxi routes in Mexico are ad hoc arrangements to fill in gaps in regular public transportation, and many operate inter-city as well as local routes. In many rural areas, they are the only public transportation.

In some cases truck/taxi combination vehicles have evolved to transport light goods as well as passengers. Heavily used share taxi routes often evolve into regulated microbus public transit routes, as has occurred in Mexico City and in Lima.

Taxis colectivos are also found in Perú, Chile, Guatemala, and Argentina, where they are most commonly referred to simply as colectivos, although in some places they have become essentially standard buses.[137]

Modern technology-based services Edit

Paratransit Edit

Modern Paratransit services, also known as demand responsive transport systems in the UK, can provide shared transport services in situations where scheduled services are not viable. Traditionally these services had to be booked a day in advance, but are becoming increasingly responsive using modern communications systems with a central booking system accessed by phone or internet and instant communications with GPS tracked vehicles. Unlike scheduled services the vehicles need not operate on fixed routes of timetables, although they do often have constrained routes.

Commercial shared taxis booking services Edit

 
MOIA van in Hamburg, Germany

Some newer taxi share systems now use internet and mobile phone communications for booking and scheduling purposes, with the actual service provided by normal hackney carriage or Private Hire vehicles. Prospective passengers make bookings and supply destination details using SMS or mobile apps to a central server which aggregates these travel requests and creates packages of trips which are then communicated to drivers.

Commercially operated airport shuttle buses Edit

There are many operators of airport shuttle services between Airports and Hotels around the world that operate on flexible routing and timing to offer a service that is both cheaper than a sole-occupancy taxi and also often more convenient that other forms of public transport. The requirement to carry luggage offers an added incentive to use such services over scheduled transport which will normally require a walk from the drop-off location to the final destination. Services from these operators are starting to spread from airports to railway stations and to other locations.

Demand responsive transport Edit

Some operators and/or governments around the world are now offering demand-based shared transport to residents in community with low ridership numbers, which could help maintain the existence of public transport. Operations are predefined according to bookings.

See also Edit

Citations Edit

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Cited works Edit

  1. ^ Thompson, p. 39.
  2. ^ a b Thompson, Robert Farris (Spring 1996). "Tap-Tap, Fula-Fula, Kíá-Kíá: The Haitian Bus in Atlantic Perspective". African Arts. 29 (2 Special Issue: Arts of Vodou): 41. doi:10.2307/3337365. JSTOR 3337365.
  3. ^ Thompson, pp. 37, 38, 44, 45.
  4. ^ Thompson, p. 36.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Share taxis at Wikimedia Commons

share, taxi, share, taxi, also, called, shared, taxi, taxibus, mode, transport, which, falls, between, taxicab, these, vehicles, hire, typically, smaller, than, buses, usually, take, passengers, fixed, semi, fixed, route, without, timetables, instead, departin. A share taxi also called shared taxi or taxibus is a mode of transport which falls between a taxicab and a bus These vehicles for hire are typically smaller than buses and usually take passengers on a fixed or semi fixed route without timetables but instead departing when all seats are filled They may stop anywhere to pick up or drop off their passengers Often found in developing countries 1 the vehicles used as share taxis range from four seat cars to minibuses 2 They are often owner operated A typical jeepney in Manila the PhilippinesIn some terms share taxis can also be referred to as taxibuses since they play a role of taxis where the destination is selected by the rider as opposed to routed buses which travel on a route that is assigned by the transit operator Contents 1 Operation 1 1 Terminus 1 2 Along the route 1 3 Operational distinctions 1 3 1 Vehicle ownership 1 3 2 Syndicates 1 4 Regulation 2 Types of vehicle 3 By country 3 1 Africa 3 1 1 Algeria 3 1 2 Burkina Faso 3 1 3 Democratic Republic of the Congo 3 1 4 Cameroon 3 1 5 Egypt 3 1 6 Ethiopia 3 1 7 Ghana 3 1 8 Ivory Coast 3 1 9 Kenya matatu 3 1 10 Madagascar 3 1 11 Mali 3 1 12 Morocco 3 1 13 Nigeria 3 1 14 Rwanda 3 1 15 South Africa 3 1 16 Tanzania 3 1 17 Tunisia 3 1 18 West Africa Kia kia 3 2 Asia 3 2 1 Hong Kong 3 2 2 Cyprus 3 2 3 India 3 2 4 Indonesia 3 2 5 Iran 3 2 6 Israel 3 2 7 The Philippines 3 2 8 Thailand 3 2 9 Turkey and Northern Cyprus 3 2 10 West Bank 3 3 Oceania 3 3 1 New Zealand 3 3 2 New Zealand Shuttle bus or van 3 4 Europe 3 4 1 Estonia 3 4 2 Greece 3 4 3 Former Soviet Union 3 4 4 Lithuania 3 4 5 Netherlands 3 4 6 United Kingdom 3 4 6 1 Northern Ireland 3 4 7 Switzerland 3 5 North America 3 5 1 Barbados 3 5 2 Dominican Republic 3 5 3 Haiti 3 5 4 Saint Lucia 3 5 5 Canada 3 5 6 Guatemala 3 5 7 United States 4 Latin America 4 1 Mexico 4 2 South America 4 2 1 Argentina 4 2 2 Chile Peru and Guatemala 5 Modern technology based services 5 1 Paratransit 5 2 Commercial shared taxis booking services 5 3 Commercially operated airport shuttle buses 5 4 Demand responsive transport 6 See also 7 Citations 8 Cited works 9 External linksOperation EditTerminus Edit A given share taxi route may start and finish in fixed central locations and landmarks may serve as route names or route termini In some African cities routes are run between formal termini 3 where the majority 4 of passengers board 3 In these places the share taxis wait for a full load of passengers prior to departing and off peak wait times may be in excess of an hour 3 In other places there may be no formal termini with taxis simply congregating at a central location 5 instead Even more formal terminals may be little more than parking lots 6 In South Africa the term rank denotes an area specifically built for taxi operators by a municipality or city where commuters may start and end their journey 7 Along the route Edit Where they exist share taxis provide service on set routes within and sometimes between towns After a share taxi has picked up passengers at its terminus it proceeds along a semi fixed route where the driver may determine the actual route within an area according to traffic condition Drivers will stop anywhere to allow riders to disembark and may sometimes do the same when prospective passengers want to ride Operational distinctions Edit While all share taxis share certain characteristics and many regional versions exhibit peculiarities some basic operational distinctions can be delineated Vehicle ownership Edit Most share taxis are operated under one of two regimes Some share taxis are operated by a company For example in Dakar there are company owned fleets of hundreds of car rapides 8 In the Soviet Union share taxis known as marshrutka were operated by state owned taxi parks 9 There are also individual operators in many countries In Africa while there are company share taxis individual owners are more common Rarely owning more than two vehicles at a time they will rent out a minibus to operators who pay fuel and other running costs and keep revenue 8 Syndicates Edit In some places like some African cities and also Hong Kong share taxi minibuses are overseen by syndicates unions or route associations 10 These groups often function in the absence of a regulatory environment 3 and may collect dues or fees from drivers 11 such as per use terminal payments 12 sometimes illegally set routes 12 manage terminals and fix fares 3 Terminal management may include ensuring each vehicle leaves with a full load of passengers 3 12 Because the syndicates represent owners their regulatory efforts tend to favor operators rather than passengers 12 and the very termini syndicates upkeep can cost delays and money for passengers as well as forcing them to disembark at inconvenient locations in a phenomenon called terminal constraint 13 Regulation Edit In Africa regulation is mainly something that pertains to the vehicle itself 14 not its operator 14 or its mode of operation citation needed In Kenya regulation does extend to operators 15 16 and mode of operation such as routes used citation needed as well as the vehicle 17 As of 2008 African minibuses are difficult to tax 11 and may operate in a regulatory vacuum perhaps because their existence is not part of a government scheme but is simply a market response to a growing demand for such services 8 Route syndicates 18 and operator s associations 13 often exercise unrestricted control and existing rules may see little enforcement 18 Types of vehicle EditShare taxi is a unique mode of transport independent of vehicle type Minibuses 11 midibuses covered pickup trucks station wagons and lorries see use as share taxis Certain vehicle types may be better suited to current condition than others In many traffic choked sprawling and low density African cities minibuses profit 11 In Israel they were mostly the largest model of Mercedes owned generally by Arabs and very efficient having space for 7 8 people and having loosely fixed routes dropping a passenger either at a specific terminus or going a little out of the way to facilitate the passenger By country EditWhile carrying different names and distinguished by regional peculiarities the share taxi is an everyday feature of life in many places throughout the world Africa Edit Further information fr Taxi brousse Some Francophone African countries use the term taxi brousse bush taxi often spelled with a space rather than a hyphen in English 19 for share taxis 20 Algeria Edit In Algeria taxis collectifs ply fixed routes with their destination displayed 21 Rides are shared with others who are picked up along the way 22 and the taxi will leave only when it seats all the passengers it can 23 While stations set locations to board and disembark exist 24 25 prospective passengers flag down a taxi collectif when they want a ride 21 Operating inter 26 27 and intra city citation needed taxis collectifs that travel between towns may be called interwilaya taxis 28 Along with all forms of public transport in Algeria the Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada recommend against using these share taxis 22 The Irish Department of Foreign Affairs asks that you use taxis recommended by a hotel 29 Burkina Faso Edit In Ouagadougou capital of Burkina Faso the share taxi or taxi brousse 30 role is not filled by the traditional African minibus 8 Democratic Republic of the Congo Edit Those in Kinshasa DRC or perhaps just the Kongo people may call share taxis fula fula meaning quick quick Thompson 1 There was no independent transport authority in the city of Kinshasa as of 2008 31 Cameroon Edit Share taxis do exist in Cameroon but as of 2008 minibuses cannot be used for this purpose by law 8 That same year Douala Cameroon also was without an independent transport authority 31 Egypt Edit Egyptian share cabs are generally known as micro bus mekrobass ميكروباص or masruʿ مشروع project plural mekrobassat ميكروباصات or masariʿ مشاريع The second name is used by Alexandrians Micro buses are licensed by each governorate as taxicabs and are generally operated privately by their drivers Although each governorate attempts to maintain a consistent paint scheme for them in practice the color of them varies wildly as the consistent schemes have changed from time to time and many drivers have not bothered to repaint their cars Rates vary depending on distance traveled although these rates are generally well known to those riding the micro bus The fares also depend on the city Riders can typically hail micro buses from any point along the route often with well established hand signals indicating the prospective rider s destination although certain areas tend to be well known micro bus stops Like the Eastern European marshrutka a typical micro bus is a large van most often a Toyota HiAce or its Jinbei equivalent the Haise and the latter is produced by the Bavarian Auto Manufacturing Group in 6th of October City in Egypt Smaller vans and larger small buses are also used Ethiopia Edit Minibus taxis in Ethiopia are one of the most important modes of transport in big cities like Addis Ababa They are preferred by the majority of the populace over public buses and more traditional taxicabs because they are generally cheap operate on diverse routes and are available in abundance All minibus taxis in Ethiopia have a standard blue and white coloring scheme much as New York taxis are yellow Minibus taxis are usually Toyota HiAces frequent the streets They typically can carry 11 passengers but will always have room for another until that is no longer the case The minibus driver has a crew member called a weyala whose job is to collect the fare from passengers In 2008 publicly operated public transport was available in Addis Ababa in addition to that provided by the minibuses 32 A fleet of 350 large buses may operate for this purpose citation needed as such a number does exist 33 Also as of 2008 the city lacks an independent transport authority 31 but some regulation such as that controlling market entry does exist 13 Route syndicates may be a presence but are described as various 10 Ghana Edit Main article Tro tro In Ghana and neighboring countries tro tro are privately owned 34 35 36 minibus vehicles for hire that travel fixed routes 36 leaving when filled to capacity 34 35 While there are tro tro stations 36 37 38 these share taxis can also be boarded anywhere along the route 34 35 36 Operated by a driver and a conductor who collects money shouts out the destination and is called a mate 36 39 many are decorated with slogans and sayings 39 often religious 34 and few operate on Sundays 35 Tro tro are used by 70 of Ghanaian commuters 40 This popularity may be because in cities such as Accra had only basic public transportation save for these small minibuses 32 Following the creation of the Greater Accra Passenger Transport Executive some large buses were brought into service mainly Brazilian built Scanias with Marcopolo bodies A Bus Rapid Transit system is being developed for opening in November 2019 41 The Swedish company Scania has won the contract to not only supply the buses but also the infrastructure 42 An informal means of transportation in Ghana they are licensed by the government but the industry is self regulated 36 In Accra syndicates include GPRTU and PROTOA 10 Ivory Coast Edit In the Ivory Coast gbaka is a name for minibus public transports 10 The transport regulator in Abidjan Ivory Coast is Agence de Gestion des Transports Urbains 31 or AGETU 18 As of 2008 Abidjan public transport was serviced by large buses as well as minibuses 33 Syndicates include UPETCA and SNTMVCI 10 Kenya matatu Edit This section is an excerpt from Matatu edit nbsp Riding in a Kenyan matatu minibus sizeIn Kenya matatu or matatus known as mathree in Sheng citation needed are privately owned minibuses used as share taxis 43 Often decorated many matatu feature portraits of famous people or slogans and sayings 44 Likewise the music they play is also aimed at quickly attracting riders 45 Over 70 of commuter trips are taken using matatu in cities like Nairobi 46 Although their origins can be traced back to the 1960s matatu saw growth in Kenya in the 1980s and 1990s and by the early 2000s the archetypal form was a gaily decorated Japanese microvan 47 C 2015 larger bus sized vehicles also started to be used as matatu The name may also be used in parts of Nigeria 48 In Kenya this industry is regulated 49 and such minibuses must by law be fitted with seatbelts 50 and speed governors 51 50 Present regulation may not be sufficient deterrent to prevent small infractions 52 as even decoration may be prohibited 51 Kenya has one of the most extensive regulatory controls to market entry 53 and a matatu worker can be pulled from the streets simply for sporting too loud a shirt 54 They may ply set routes 55 display this route 56 run from termini 57 58 run both inter and intra city 55 59 and may stop along said route to purchase or collect money from passengers 60 In addition to a driver matatu may be staffed by a conductor 61 locally known as a makanga or manamba or donda As of 1999 they were the only form of public transport available in Nairobi Kenya although in 2006 and 2008 this was no longer the case Over the years stiff competition 62 is being experienced from bus sharing applications such as SWVL 63 Madagascar Edit This section is an excerpt from Driving in Madagascar Taxi brousses nbsp Four taxi brousses at a station in Ambositra nbsp Interior of a crowded taxi brousse Madagascar s taxi brousses are a type of share taxi which as of 2005 update cost US 0 10 per passenger They comprise a public transportation system that is relatively affordable in Madagascar s poverty 64 61 68 Most taxi brousses do not embark until all seats are full 64 70 While taxi brousses use fixed stops passengers can also exit at any point along the route 64 73 Taxi brousse company fleets range in size from a single vehicle to over a hundred and may serve one or more urban regional or national lines 64 70 National lines travel from their origin to their destination directly disallowing improvised stops along the route 65 A vehicle is staffed by a driver and assistant driver or two drivers on a very long route Other people are employed to attract customers and fasten luggage to the vehicle s roof 64 75 Mali Edit In Mali at least two words for share taxi may have common currency sotrama and dourouni 10 As of 2008 Bamako Mali has no independent transport authority 31 but share taxi activity could fall under regulator Direction de la regulation et du controle du transport urbain municipal or DRCTU control 18 Morocco Edit In Morocco grands taxis are the name for large unmetered shared taxicabs used for transportation between towns 66 Grands taxis are generally old full size Mercedes Benz sedans and seat six or more passengers 66 Nigeria Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source The danfo share taxi and molue minibuses are iconic of transport in Lagos Nigeria In Nigeria both minibuses called danfo 67 and midibuses molue 10 may be operated as share taxis Such forms of public transport may also be referred to as bolekaja and many bear slogans or sayings Thompson 2 Lagos Nigeria has a transport dedicated regulator Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Agency LAMATA 31 its remit most probably includes share taxi activity citation needed Outside of Lagos most major cities in Africa have similar systems of transport 68 Syndicates in Lagos may include National Union of Road and Transport Workers NURTW 10 Rwanda Edit Minibus public transports in Rwanda may be called coaster buses 69 share taxis or twegerane 10 The latter could easily be a word meaning stuffed or full 69 As of 2020 in Kigali Rwanda syndicates include RFTC Kigali Bus Services and Royal express all of these operating in Kigali but each province has got a couple of companies operating there as well nbsp Kigali Bus Services in RwandaSouth Africa Edit nbsp Cape Town minibus taxi rank nbsp Modern Toyota share taxi in Cape TownSee also Taxi wars in South Africa Over 60 of South African commuters use shared minibus taxis 16 seater commuter buses sometimes referred to as kombis 70 Many of these vehicles are unsafe and not roadworthy and often dangerously overloaded 70 Prior to 1987 the taxi industry in South Africa was highly regulated and controlled Black taxi operators were declined permits in the Apartheid era and all minibus taxi operations were by their very nature illegal 70 Post 1987 the industry was rapidly deregulated leading to an influx of new minibus taxi operators keen to make money off the high demand for this service Taxi operators banded together to form local and national associations Because the industry was largely unregulated and the official regulating bodies corrupt citation needed these associations soon engaged in anti competitive price fixing and exhibited gangster tactics including the hiring of hit men and all out gang warfare 71 During the height of the conflict it was not uncommon for taxi drivers to carry shotguns and AK 47s to simply shoot rival taxi drivers and their passengers on sight citation needed Currently when the South African Government is attempting to formalize and re regulate the out of control minibus taxi industry Along with new legislation the government has instituted a 7 year recapitalization scheme to replace the old and un roadworthy vehicles with new 18 and 35 seater minibuses These new minibus taxis carry the South African flag on the side and are notably more spacious and safe Tanzania Edit Main article Dala dala nbsp A dala dala in the city of Dar es SalaamMinivans minibuses may be a more correct term here are used as vehicles for hire and referred to as dala dala in Tanzania 72 While dala dala may run fixed routes picking up passengers at central locations they will also stop along the route to drop someone off or allow a prospective passenger to board 72 Before minibuses became widely used the typical dala dala was a pick up truck with benches placed in the truck bed 73 In Dar es Salaam publicly operated minibus service may also exist as of 2008 10 Usually run by both a driver and a conductor 72 the latter is called a mpigadebe literally meaning a person who hits a debe a 4 gallon tin container used for transporting gasoline or water The name is in reference to the fact that conductors often hit the roof and side of the van to attract customers and to notify the driver when to leave the station These often crowded 72 public transports have their routes allocated by a Tanzania transport regulator Surface and Marine Transport Regulatory Authority SUMATRA 74 but syndicates also exist and include DARCOBOA 10 Tunisia Edit nbsp Share taxi in TunisiaShare taxis in Tunisia are called louage and follow fixed or semi fixed routes departing from stations when full 75 Usually minibuses or compact cars 75 although some louage are station wagons 76 passengers may board and disembark at any point during travel 75 They run between towns and within cities 75 West Africa Kia kia Edit The term kia kia may be used in Yorubaland to refer to minibus public transports and means quick quick Thompson 2 Asia Edit nbsp A public light bus left and a double decker bus right in Hong Kong Hong Kong Edit Main article Public light bus Public light buses Chinese 公共小型巴士 also known as minibus or maxicab Chinese 小巴 run the length and breadth of Hong Kong through areas which the standard bus lines cannot or do not reach as frequently quickly or directly Typically offering a faster and more efficient transportation solution due to their small size limited carrying capacity frequency and diverse range of routes although they are generally slightly more expensive than standard buses minibuses carry a maximum of 19 seated passengers Standing passengers are not allowed There are two types of public light minibus green and red Both types have a cream coloured body the distinguishing feature being the colour of the external roof and the type of service that the colour denotes green is like regular transit bus with fixed number route schedule and fare but generally not fixed stops red is a shared taxi operating on semi fixed route unregulated with the driver waiting for enough passengers to justify leaving as his income depends on the revenue Cyprus Edit In Cyprus there are privately owned share taxis that travel to set destinations and board additional passengers en route called service taxis 77 India Edit Shared taxis have been operating in Mumbai India since the early 1970s These are point to point services that operate during peak hours During off peak hours they ply like regular taxis they can be hailed anywhere on the roads and passengers are charged by the meter During peak hours they will take a full cab load of passengers to a more or less common destination The pick up points are usually fixed and sometimes but not always marked by a sign saying shared taxis Cabs typically line up at this point during peak hours They sometimes display their general destination on their windscreens and passengers get in and wait for the cab to fill up Once full the cab moves off Fares are fixed and much lower than the metered fare to the same destination but higher than a bus or train fare Such informal arrangements also exist in other Indian cities Share jeeps are a common form of transportation in the Himalayas the North Eastern States and elsewhere 78 Indonesia Edit nbsp An Angkot in JakartaAngkutan Kota lit city transport abbreviated as angkot are share taxis in Indonesia widely operating throughout the country usually with microbuses In some places there were also three wheelers which are called bemo such as autorickshaws based on the Daihatsu Midget but phased out The older version of Angkot is called oplet The name of this transportation differs from each different province or area in the country In Jakarta it is called angkot or mikrolet in other parts such as in Sulawesi the term mikrolet shortened mikro is more widely used especially in Manado In Makassar it is called pete pete in Malang it is called angkota in Medan it is called sudako in Aceh it is called labi labi Share taxis operated across rural village routes are called angkutan desa lit village transport abbreviated as angkudes Angkot and angkudes runs accordingly with its exact routes and may stops at any class of bus stations A B and C Type bus stations 79 Additionally passengers can stop the van anywhere according to its destination and is not required to stop at a bus stop 80 Iran Edit nbsp Sharing ajans in TehranIn Iran a share taxi is usually called taxi while a non share is called ajans اژانس pronounced aʒans Four passengers share a taxi and sometimes there is no terminus and they wait in the street side and blare their destination to all taxies until one of them stops These are regular taxies but if somebody wants to get a non share taxi he can call for an ajans taxi service for himself or wait in the street side and say Darbast which means non share It means he is not interested in sharing the taxi and is consequently willing to pay more for the privilege Minibuses in the past years with a capacity of 18 passengers and nowadays van taxies with a capacity of 10 passengers are other kinds of share transport in Iran 81 Israel Edit nbsp Sherut taxisIn Hebrew מונית שירות monit sherut pl Hebrew מוניות שירות moniyot sherut is a word meaning service taxi Referring to vans or minibuses 82 83 84 that serve as share taxis in Israel these can be picked up from anywhere on their route 82 They follow fixed routes 82 83 sometimes the same routes as public transport buses 82 and usually leave from the initial station only when full 82 85 Moniyot sherut operate both inter 83 86 and intra city 83 Payment is often done by passing money to the driver in a human chain formed by the passengers seated before The change and the receipt when requested are returned to the person who paid by the same means In intra city routes where they compete with official buses the drivers usually coordinate their travel by radio so that they can arrive at the bus station just before public transport buses and take the most passengers Monit sherut are one of the only forms of transit accessible to many Israelis during Shabbat as most public transportation in the country closes down between sunset on Friday and sunset on Saturday The Philippines Edit Main articles Jeepney and UV Express nbsp UV Express vehicle in Metro ManilaThe most popular means of public transportation in the Philippines as of 2007 87 jeepneys were originally made out of US military jeeps left over from World War II 88 and are known for their color and flamboyant decoration 87 Today the jeepneys are built by local body shops from a combination of prefabricated elements from handful Filipino manufacturers and improvisation and in most cases equipped with surplus or used Japanese SUV or light truck engines drive train suspension and steering components from recycled vehicles in Japan They have not changed much since their post war creation even in the face of an increased access to pre made vehicles such as minibuses citation needed However due to the government s Public Utility Vehicle Modernization Program Jeepneys and other modes of transportation must comply to the newer Philippine National Standards which is more compliant with international standards Older jeepneys have the entrance on the back and there is space for two people beside the driver or more if they are small while the modern jeepneys have two doors on the right side of the vehicle The back cab of the Jeepney is equipped with two long bench seats along the sides and the people seated closest to the driver are responsible for passing the fare of new passengers forward to the driver and the change back to the passenger The start and end point of the jeepney route is often a jeepney terminal where there is a queue system so only one jeepney plying a particular route is filled at a time and where a person helps the driver to collect fares and fill the vehicles with people usually to more than comfortable capacity Preferring to leave only when full and only stop for a crowd of potential passengers 89 riders can nonetheless disembark at any time 90 and while jeepneys ply fixed routes 87 these may be subject to change over time 91 New ones may need approval from a Philippine transport regulator 92 Jeepney stations do exist 93 Another share taxi that is also common in the Philippines is the UV Express which uses Compact MPVs and vans as its form factor These vehicles seat 10 18 people and charges additional 2 Philippine peso per kilometer as of 2013 Thailand Edit Main article Songthaew Literally two rows citation needed a songthaew or song thaew 94 Thai sxngaethw Lao ສອງແຖວ sɔ ːŋtʰiw is a passenger vehicle in Thailand 94 and Laos 95 adapted from a pick up 95 or a larger truck and used as a share taxi They are also known as baht buses Turkey and Northern Cyprus Edit nbsp Karsan built Peugeot J9 Premier dolmus in Bodrum TurkeyIn Turkey and Turkish controlled Northern Cyprus dolmus pronounced dolmush are share taxis that run on set routes within and between cities 96 Each of these cars or minibuses displays their particular route on signboards behind the windscreen 96 Some cities may only allow dolmus to pick up and disembark passengers at designated stops and terminals also exist 96 The word derives from Turkish for full or stuffed as these share taxis depart from the terminal only when a sufficient number of passengers have boarded 97 Visitors to Turkey have been surprised by the speed of dolmus travel 98 These share taxis are also found in Turkish controlled Northern Cyprus under the same name 97 Traveling intra and inter city the privately owned minibuses or aging Mercedes stretch limos are overseen by a governance institution routes are leased and vehicles licensed 97 Passengers board anywhere along the route you may have to get the driver to stop if he doesn t honk at you as well as at termini and official stations 97 Dolmus in Turkish controlled Northern Cyprus display their routes but don t follow timetables Instead they simply appear frequently 97 West Bank Edit Share taxis are often called ser vees service taxi in the West Bank Minibuses are often used in lieu of vans Ford Transit vans were often a popular vehicle for conversion 99 resulting in the generic trademark Ford and Fordat pl being used to describe minibuses of various makes replacing aging Mercedes sedans 83 Oceania Edit New Zealand Edit In New Zealand the first widespread motor vehicle services were shared taxi services termed service cars a significant early provider was Aard operating elongated Hudson Super Sixes 100 By 1930 there were 597 service cars 101 Aard was taken over by New Zealand Railways Road Services in 1928 100 Shared taxis in New Zealand nowadays are referred to as Shuttles or Shuttle vans see below New Zealand Shuttle bus or van Edit nbsp A shuttle van service to Dunedin International Airport picks up a passenger at Dunedin Railway Station in New Zealand nbsp New Zealand traffic sign for a shuttle stopShared buses or vans are available in many more developed countries connecting frequent destinations charging a fixed fee per passenger The most common case is a connection between an airport and central city locations These services are often known as shuttles Such services usually use smaller vehicles than normal buses and often operate on demand An air traveller can contact the shuttle company by telephone or Internet not necessarily in advance the company will ensure that a shuttle is provided without unreasonable delay The shuttle will typically connect one airport with several large hotels or addresses in a specified area of the city The shuttle offers much of the convenience of a taxi although taking longer at a price which is significantly lower for one or two passengers Scheduled services between an airport and a hotel usually operated by the hotel are also called shuttles In many cases the shuttle operator takes the risk of there not being enough passengers to make the trip profitable in others there is a minimum charge when there are not enough passengers 102 Usually there are regulations covering vehicles and drivers for example in New Zealand under NZTA regulations shuttles are only allowed to have up to eleven passenger seats and the driver must have a passenger endorsement P on their drivers licence Europe Edit Estonia Edit Share taxis in Estonia are mostly found in Tallinn the capital citation needed Called liinitakso marsruuttakso taksobuss or mikroautobuss depending on the language spoken these minibuses run fixed routes and allow passengers to disembark at any time 103 Greece Edit In Athens Greece most taxis were share taxis 104 but since the country joined the EU this tradition started to disappear Former Soviet Union Edit This section is an excerpt from Marshrutka edit nbsp Marshrutka in Moscow RussiaMarshrutka 105 106 or marshrutnoe taksi 107 Russian and Ukrainian marshru tka mɐrˈʂrutke from marshrutn oy e taksi plural marshrutki or routed taxicab are share taxis found in Eastern Europe and the republics of the former Soviet Union 108 Usually vans they drive along set routes depart only when all seats are filled and may have higher fares than buses 105 106 108 Passengers can board a marshrutka anywhere along its route if there are seats available 106 108 Fares are usually paid before the marshrutka leaves riders nearer the driver are responsible for handing up the other passengers fares and passing back change 108 109 nbsp Four marshrutkas in Bishkek KyrgyzstanLithuania Edit In Lithuania share taxis are called marsrutinis taksi Netherlands Edit Besides the conventional deeltaxi there are treintaxis in some Dutch towns Operated on behalf of the Netherlands Railways citation needed they run to and from railway stations and the ride is shared with additional passengers picked up along the way 110 Tickets can be purchased at railway ticket offices or from the cabdriver 110 but treintaxis must be ordered by phone unless boarding at a railway station 110 United Kingdom Edit In 2018 Arriva launched shared taxi service Arriva Click in Liverpool and Sittingbourne and Kent Science Park in the United Kingdom 111 Northern Ireland Edit In some towns in Northern Ireland notably certain districts in Ballymena Belfast Derry and Newry share taxi services operate using Hackney carriages and are called black taxis These services developed during The Troubles as public bus services were often interrupted due to street rioting Taxi collectives are closely linked with political groups those operating in Catholic areas with Sinn Fein those in Protestant areas with loyalist paramilitaries and their political wings Typically fares approximate to those of Translink operated bus services on the same route Service frequencies are typically higher than on bus services especially at peak times although limited capacities mean that passengers living close to the termini may find it difficult to find a black taxi with seats available in the rush hour Switzerland Edit Major providers of mobility services as MOD Mobility On Demand and or Collective Taxi in Switzerland are Telebus Kriens LU Taxito myBuxi Kollibri by Swiss Postal Bus and Pikmi by VBZ Verkehrsbetriebe Zurich ZH Most providers as TNC Transportation Network Companies run single source mobility platforms for the service and or are connected with multi modal mobility platforms of Public Transit Collective Traffic and city administration community organization citation needed North America Edit Barbados Edit Most areas of Barbados are served by ZRs which run in addition to the government run bus service Dominican Republic Edit In the Dominican Republic these privately owned vehicles 112 run fixed routes 113 112 with no designated stops and the ride is shared with other passengers 113 Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada advises against traveling in Dominican Republic carros publicos because doing so makes passengers targets for robbery and because the taxis are known to disregard traffic laws often resulting in serious accidents involving injuries and sometimes death 114 The US Department of State also warns that using them is hazardous as passengers often have their pockets picked and are sometimes robbed by the drivers themselves 112 Haiti Edit nbsp A Haitian tap tapMain article Tap tap Tap taps gaily painted buses 115 116 or pick up trucks 116 and publiques usually older saloon cars 117 serve as share taxis in Haiti Tap taps are privately owned and beautifully decorated 115 They follow fixed routes 118 won t leave until filled with passengers 116 118 and many feature wild colors portraits of famous people and intricate hand cut wooden window covers 115 Often they are painted with religious names or slogans Thompson 3 Riders can disembark at any point in the journey 116 118 Their name refers to fast motion Thompson 4 The publiques operate on fixed routes and pick up additional passengers all along the way 117 While saying not to use any form of public transport in Haiti the Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada advises against tap tap travel especially 119 The US State Department also warns travelers not to use tap taps because they are often overloaded mechanically unsound and driven unsafely 120 Saint Lucia Edit In Saint Lucia waychehs are a name for minibus public transports using Toyota HiAce Canada Edit See also Societe de transport de Montreal Reseau de transport de Longueuil Shared taxi and Societe de transport de Laval In Quebec share taxis or jitneys are called taxis collectifs 121 in English shared taxis 122 or transport collectif par taxi 123 which the STM translates in English as taxibus 124 and are operated by subcontractors to the local transit authorities on fixed routes 125 126 Google translate renders transport collectif par taxi as public transport by taxi 127 In the case of the Montreal the fare is the same as local bus fare but no cash and transfers are issued or accepted 128 in case of the STL only bus passes 122 The Reseau de transport de Longueuil accepts regular RTL tickets and all RTL and some Reseau de transport metropolitain TRAM passes 129 Guatemala Edit In Guatemala ruleteros minibus share taxis pick up and discharge passengers along major streets 130 131 United States Edit Main article Dollar van Jitney is an American English term that originally referred to a vehicle for hire intermediate between a taxi and a bus 132 It is generally a small capacity vehicle that follows a rough service route but it can go slightly out of its way to pick up and drop off passengers In many US cities e g Pittsburgh and Detroit the term jitney refers to an unlicensed taxi cab The name comes from an archaic colloquial term for a five cent piece in the US the nickel The common fare for the service when it first came into use was five cents so the five cent cab or jitney cab came to be known for the price charged In Rhode Island a jitney license plate is used for all public passenger buses even for larger ones nbsp Jitney in Atlantic City United States in 2008While jitneys became fairly common in many other countries such as the Philippines they first appeared in the United States and Canada The first US jitneys ran in 1914 in Los Angeles California By 1915 there were 62 000 nationwide Local regulations demanded by streetcar companies killed the jitney in most places By the end of 1916 only 6 000 jitneys remained 133 Similarly in Vancouver British Columbia Canada in the 1920s jitneys competed directly with the streetcar monopoly operating along the same routes as the streetcars but jitneys were charging lower fares 134 Operators were referred to as jitney men They were so successful that the city government banned them at the request of the streetcar operators Since the 1973 oil crisis as well as the mid 20th century decline in transit service jitneys have reappeared in some areas of the US particularly in inner city areas once served by streetcars and private buses An increase in bus fares usually leads to a significant rise in jitney usage Liberalization of jitneys is often encouraged by libertarian urban economists such as University of Chicago s Richard Epstein Rutgers James Dunn and USC s Peter Gordon as a more market friendly alternative to public transportation Concerns over fares insurance liabilities and passenger safety have kept legislative support for jitneys decidedly tepid Nevertheless in New York City and northern New Jersey jitneys known as dollar vans because of their original price are regulated Miami has the country s most comprehensive jitney network due to Caribbean influence In Atlanta jitneys run along Buford Highway In Atlantic City the ACJA operates a jitney service that travels the main strip of casinos One of the routes also services the new cluster of casinos west of Atlantic City proper In 2009 the Houston Waves Houston s first jitney service in 17 years started running It has expanded into a network of buses operating within Loop 610 and to all special event venues in Houston Latin America EditIn Puerto Rico carros publicos literally public cars are share taxis 135 Carros Publicos set routes with several passengers sharing the ride 136 and others picked up throughout the journey 135 The industry is regulated by the Puerto Rico Public Service Commission 5 While these cars do travel inter city they may not be available for longer cross island travel 5 Stations may exist in cities and Puerto Rican carros publicos may congregate in specific places around town 5 Mexico Edit See also Pesero Along with traditional bus and minibus routes in some areas that the regular size buses couldn t fit due to the road and street height and width with small size but they are regulated in standard minibuses fare depending the state and city of the country South America Edit Argentina Edit Main article Colectivo Colectivos operated as share taxis from the late 1920s until the 1950s in Buenos Aires Argentina when they were integrated into the public transportation system Vehicles still known as colectivos operate throughout the country but have long been indistinguishable from buses 137 Chile Peru and Guatemala Edit See also Pesero and Combi nbsp Taxis Colectivos of different lines in Talca ChileOften share taxi routes in Mexico are ad hoc arrangements to fill in gaps in regular public transportation and many operate inter city as well as local routes In many rural areas they are the only public transportation In some cases truck taxi combination vehicles have evolved to transport light goods as well as passengers Heavily used share taxi routes often evolve into regulated microbus public transit routes as has occurred in Mexico City and in Lima Taxis colectivos are also found in Peru Chile Guatemala and Argentina where they are most commonly referred to simply as colectivos although in some places they have become essentially standard buses 137 Modern technology based services EditParatransit Edit Modern Paratransit services also known as demand responsive transport systems in the UK can provide shared transport services in situations where scheduled services are not viable Traditionally these services had to be booked a day in advance but are becoming increasingly responsive using modern communications systems with a central booking system accessed by phone or internet and instant communications with GPS tracked vehicles Unlike scheduled services the vehicles need not operate on fixed routes of timetables although they do often have constrained routes Commercial shared taxis booking services Edit nbsp MOIA van in Hamburg GermanySome newer taxi share systems now use internet and mobile phone communications for booking and scheduling purposes with the actual service provided by normal hackney carriage or Private Hire vehicles Prospective passengers make bookings and supply destination details using SMS or mobile apps to a central server which aggregates these travel requests and creates packages of trips which are then communicated to drivers Commercially operated airport shuttle buses Edit There are many operators of airport shuttle services between Airports and Hotels around the world that operate on flexible routing and timing to offer a service that is both cheaper than a sole occupancy taxi and also often more convenient that other forms of public transport The requirement to carry luggage offers an added incentive to use such services over scheduled transport which will normally require a walk from the drop off location to the final destination Services from these operators are starting to spread from airports to railway stations and to other locations Demand responsive transport Edit Main article Demand responsive transport Some operators and or governments around the world are now offering demand based shared transport to residents in community with low ridership numbers which could help maintain the existence of public transport Operations are predefined according to bookings See also EditDollar van Dolmus Marshrutka Nanny van Pesero Public light bus Hong Kong Citations Edit Urban transportation systems choices for communities p 254 Archived 2023 02 09 at the Wayback Machine Sigurd Grava McGraw Hill Professional 2003 840 pp 0071384170 9780071384179 Cervero Robert September 1992 Fostering Commercial Transit Alternatives in Greater Los Angeles Reason No 146 Archived from the original on 2006 12 30 a b c d e f Kumar amp Barrett Stuck in Traffic 2008 p xiv Archived 2012 09 17 at the Wayback Machine OOH Mass urbanisation and the South African taxi commuter 2 October 2013 Archived from the original on 25 October 2020 Retrieved 23 January 2016 a b c d Q amp A Archived 2020 11 04 at the Wayback Machine nytimes com February 21 1988 Kumar amp Barrett Stuck in Traffic 2008 p 24 Archived 2012 09 17 at the Wayback Machine City of Johannesburg Taxis Archived from the original on 2016 12 21 Retrieved 2016 01 23 a b c d e Stuck in Traffic Urban Transport in Africa p 8 Archived 2012 09 17 at the Wayback Machine Ajay Kumar amp Fanny Barrett Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic in cooperation with the World Bank January 2008 Draft Final Report RAF 977DM marshrutnoye taksi Avtomobil Na Sluzhbie No 28 DeAgostini 2012 ISSN 2223 0440 in Russian a b c d e f g h i j k Kumar amp Barrett Stuck in Traffic 2008 p 9 Archived 2012 09 17 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Kumar amp Barrett Stuck in Traffic 2008 p 10 Archived 2012 09 17 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Kumar amp Barrett Stuck in Traffic 2008 p 11 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2012 09 17 Retrieved 2011 04 10 a b c Kumar amp Barrett Stuck in Traffic 2008 p 17 Archived 2012 09 17 at the Wayback Machine a b Kumar amp Barrett Stuck in Traffic 2008 p xv Archived 2012 09 17 at the Wayback Machine Nairobi Today the Paradox of a Fragmented City Hidden Centz Rolling the Wheels of Nairobi Matatu Mbugua wa Mungai p 371 Archived 2023 02 09 at the Wayback Machine edited by Helene Charton Bigot Deyssi Rodriguez Torres African Books Collective 2010 404 pp 9987080936 9789987080939 Nairobi Today the Paradox of a Fragmented City Hidden Centz Rolling the Wheels of Nairobi Matatu Mbugua wa Mungai p 376 Archived 2023 02 09 at the Wayback Machine edited by Helene Charton Bigot Deyssi Rodriguez Torres African Books Collective 2010 404 pp 9987080936 9789987080939 Kenya p 383 Archived 2023 02 09 at the Wayback Machine Tom Parkinson Max Phillips Will Gourlay Lonely Planet 2006 352 pp 1740597435 9781740597432 a b c d Stuck in Traffic Urban Transport in Africa p 15 Archived 2012 09 17 at the Wayback Machine Ajay Kumar amp Fanny Barrett Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic in cooperation with the World Bank January 2008 Draft Final Report Wulf Volker Misaki Kaoru Randall Dave Rohde Markus 2018 Travelling by Taxi Brousse in Madagascar An Investigation into Practices of Overland Transportation PDF Media in Action University of Siegen 1 57 97 doi 10 25969 mediarep 16218 Archived PDF from the original on 2023 01 18 Retrieved 2023 01 19 Gbadamassi Falila 10 August 2017 Les vieux modeles Peugeot Citroen guimbardes a l epreuve des routes africaines France Info in French Archived from the original on 21 January 2023 Retrieved 21 January 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b Transport in Algiers Local transport Taxi Archived 2020 04 02 at the Wayback Machine lonelyplanet com a b TRAVEL REPORT Algeria 9 TRAVEL AND CURRENCY Archived 2012 09 19 at the Wayback Machine Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada Official Site Johathan Oakes Bradt Travel Guide Algeria p 173 Archived 2023 02 09 at the Wayback Machine Bradt Travel Guides 2008 352 pp 184162232X 9781841622323 Oakes Jonathan 2008 Oakes 2008 Bradt Travel Guide Algeria p 90 ISBN 9781841622323 Archived from the original on 2023 02 09 Retrieved 2016 07 10 Oakes Jonathan 2008 Oakes 2008 Bradt Travel Guide Algeria p 173 ISBN 9781841622323 Archived from the original on 2023 02 09 Retrieved 2016 07 10 Oakes Jonathan 2008 Oakes 2008 Bradt Travel Guide Algeria p 125 ISBN 9781841622323 Archived from the original on 2023 02 09 Retrieved 2016 07 10 Oakes Jonathan 2008 Oakes 2008 Bradt Travel Guide Algeria p 141 ISBN 9781841622323 Archived from the original on 2023 02 09 Retrieved 2016 07 10 Oakes Jonathan 2008 Oakes 2008 Bradt Travel Guide Algeria p 44 ISBN 9781841622323 Archived from the original on 2023 02 09 Retrieved 2016 07 10 Travel Advice Algeria Road Safety Archived 2020 03 14 at the 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from the Field The Tro Tro An Essential Mode of Transport in Accra Ghana Archived 2011 07 18 at the Wayback Machine blogs ei columbia edu 9 29 2010 West Africa p 347 Archived 2023 02 09 at the Wayback Machine Anthony Ham Lonely Planet 2009 7th ed 912 pp 1741048214 9781741048216 Ghana The Bradt Travel Guide p 113 Archived 2023 02 09 at the Wayback Machine Philip Briggs Bradt Travel Guides 2007 4th ed 416 pp 1841622052 9781841622057 a b TroTro Station Archived 2020 12 07 at the Wayback Machine ghanaweb com City of Accra Ghana consultative citizens report card page 113 Archived 2016 04 08 at the Wayback Machine Report No 55117 GH The World Bank 2010 06 01 Buses Rapid Transit To Commence In November Government of Ghana www ghana gov gh Archived from the original on 2016 09 18 Bus rapid transit systems in ghana Archived from the original on 2020 02 17 Retrieved 2019 02 03 For Kenya and neighbouring nations see Kenya s Taxi Vans Are Packed and Perilous nytimes com 24 April 1988 For private ownership see In Nairobi Kenya puts brakes on its runaway success csmonitor com 28 June 1999 For matatu as minibuses see Kenya page 383 Tom Parkinson Max Phillips Will Gourlay Lonely Planet 2006 416 pages 1740597435 9781740597432 For past use of pick up trucks see Have You Ever Taken A Matatu Archived 25 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine glpinc org and Field notes a matatu a bike and a walk Schatz Enid Contexts Vol 2 No 3 SUMMER 2003 pp 58 59 For past use of estate cars see Muyia Nafukho The Forgonen Workers PDF Social Science Research Report Series no 18 Organization for Social Science Research in Eastern and Southern Africa p 7 Retrieved 25 September 2012 For portraits see Nairobi Today the Paradox of a Fragmented City Hidden Centz Rolling the Wheels of Nairobi Matatu Mbugua wa Mungai page 376 edited by Helene Charton Bigot Deyssi Rodriguez Torres African Books Collective 2010 404 pages 9987080936 9789987080939 For slogans and sayings see Roll over Snoop Dogg Ocampo is new king of the matatu csmonitor com 29 January 2010 DJ Edu 21 February 2015 The buses you choose because of their music Radio 1Xtra BBC Retrieved 1 March 2015 The matatus of Nairobi A necessary bane www downtoearth org in Retrieved 2022 09 09 Mutongi Kenda 2017 Matatu A History of Popular Transportation in Nairobi University of Chicago Press pp 7 8 ISBN 978 0 226 47142 6 The Boda Boda Boom Part Two The Boda Boda Boom 1 March 2016 6 or 7 minutes in BBC In Nairobi Kenya puts brakes on its runaway success csmonitor com June 28 1999 a b Kenya p 383 Tom Parkinson Max Phillips Will Gourlay Lonely Planet 2006 352 pp 1740597435 9781740597432 a b Nairobi Today the Paradox of a Fragmented City Hidden Centz Rolling the Wheels of Nairobi Matatu Mbugua wa Mungai p 371 edited by Helene Charton Bigot Deyssi Rodriguez Torres African Books Collective 2010 404 pp 9987080936 9789987080939 Nairobi Today the Paradox of a Fragmented City Hidden Centz Rolling the Wheels of Nairobi Matatu Mbugua wa Mungai p 367 edited by Helene Charton Bigot Deyssi Rodriguez Torres African Books Collective 2010 404 pp 9987080936 9789987080939 Kumar amp Barrett Stuck in Traffic 2008 p 17 Archived 2012 09 17 at the Wayback Machine Rodriguez Torres Deyssi Charton Bigot Helene 2010 Nairobi Today The Paradox of a Fragmented City African Books Collective ISBN 978 9987 08 093 9 a b Kenya p 382 Tom Parkinson Max Phillips Will Gourlay Lonely Planet 2006 352 pp 1740597435 9781740597432 Nairobi Today the Paradox of a Fragmented City Hidden Centz Rolling the Wheels of Nairobi Matatu Mbugua wa Mungai p 367 edited by Helene Charton Bigot Deyssi Rodriguez Torres African Books Collective 2010 404 pp 9987080936 9789987080939 Kenya p 383 Tom Parkinson Max Phillips Will Gourlay Lonely Planet 2006 352 pp 1740597435 9781740597432 Nairobi Today the Paradox of a Fragmented City Hidden Centz Rolling the Wheels of Nairobi Matatu Mbugua wa Mungai p 374 edited by Helene Charton Bigot Deyssi Rodriguez Torres African Books Collective 2010 404 pp 9987080936 9789987080939 Negotiating social space East African microenterprises p 69 Patrick O Alila Poul O Pedersen Africa World Press 2001 353 pp 0865439648 9780865439641 For set routes see Kenya page 382 Tom Parkinson Max Phillips Will Gourlay Lonely Planet 2006 352 pages 1740597435 9781740597432 For termini see Nairobi Today the Paradox of a Fragmented City Hidden Centz Rolling the Wheels of Nairobi Matatu Mbugua wa Mungai page 374 edited by Helene Charton Bigot Deyssi Rodriguez Torres African Books Collective 2010 404 pages 9987080936 9789987080939 For intra and inter city travel see Negotiating social space East African microenterprises page 69 Patrick O Alila Poul O Pedersen Africa World Press 2001 353 pages 0865439648 9780865439641 Nairobi Today the Paradox of a Fragmented City Hidden Centz Rolling the Wheels of Nairobi Matatu Mbugua wa Mungai page 371 edited by Helene Charton Bigot Deyssi Rodriguez Torres African Books Collective 2010 404 pages 9987080936 9789987080939 Ride 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Tap Fula Fula Kia Kia The Haitian Bus in Atlantic Perspective African Arts 29 2 Special Issue Arts of Vodou 41 doi 10 2307 3337365 JSTOR 3337365 Thompson pp 37 38 44 45 Thompson p 36 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Share taxis at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Share taxi amp oldid 1179764468, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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