From Innovative Mobility Research

Susan Shaheen, Ph.D.

Posted in: Staff

Nov 1, 2007 - 7:13:50 PM

susan_shaheen_1.jpg
Research Director
Transportation Sustainability Research Center (TSRC)
Honda Distinguished Scholar, ITS-Davis

Office: (510) 665-3483

e-mail: sashaheen@tsrc.berkeley.edu and sashaheen@ucdavis.edu

Susan's interest in environmentally- and socially-beneficial technology applications led her to focus her doctoral dissertation on "smart" carsharing, linked to transit in the mid-1990s. She designed and tested the CarLink I and II pilot programs, using advanced technologies to support commuter carsharing services from 1997 to 2002. Carsharing has been proven to reduce auto ownership, energy use, and emissions and increase transit ridership, cycling, and walking. In addition, she has maintained an extensive database on carsharing and station car trends in North America over the last ten years.

An internationally recognized leader in innovative mobility research, Susan continues to focus on carsharing, as well as several other areas, including: smart parking management for transit and trucks, fuel cell vehicles and infrastructure, smart growth/development, AB 32 ( California’s Global Warming Solutions Act), low-speed electric modes linked to transit, and older mobility.

Susan holds a joint research appointment at the Transportation Sustainability Research Center (TSRC), headquartered at the University of California (UC) Berkeley, and at UC Davis' Institute of Transportation Studies. In October 2007, Susan became a Research Director at TSRC. As of April 2006, Susan co-leads the transportation track of the Energy Efficiency Center at UC Davis. In September 2002, Susan launched and now directs a group of projects, called Innovative Mobility Research, housed at TSRC. She also served as the program leader for the Policy and Behavioral Research program of California Partners for Advanced Transit and Highways (PATH) from 2003 to 2007, and as a Special Assistant to the Director's Office of the California Department of Transportation (2001 to 2004). In November 2000, she was honored as the first Honda Distinguished Scholar in Transportation.

She has a Ph.D. in ecology, focusing on technology management and the environmental aspects of transportation, from UC Davis; an MS in public policy analysis from the University of Rochester; and a BA in political science and English (writing concentration) from Nazareth College. She also has graduate certificates from the University of Paris, Sorbonne and the University of Oxford (sponsored by an Eisenhower scholarship from the English Speaking Union). She completed her post-doctoral studies on advanced public transportation systems at UC Berkeley. She has over seventeen years of professional experience in transportation and environmental policy.

While a doctoral candidate, she received a variety of awards, including the University of California's Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year, the Dwight David Eisenhower Fellowship (ranked 3rd in nation), a National Science Foundation Award, an Eno Leadership Fellowship, and a National Air and Waste Management Association Scholarship (ranked 2nd among all applicants). She has co-edited one book and authored 28 journal articles and over 40 reports and proceeding articles. In May 2007, she received the Berkeley Staff Assembly's "Excellence in Management" award. She is also the chair of the Transportation Research Board's (TRB) Committee on New Public Transportation Systems and Technologies (2004 to present) and was the founding chair of TRB's Carsharing/Station Car Subcommittee (1999 to 2004). She serves on the Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) World Congress Program Committee (2003 to present). She also served on the Governor's Environmental Action Plan Working Group in California.

She envisions a new transportation future in which advanced information and alternative fuel technologies are integrated to offer travelers many of the same advantages as personal vehicles, yet provide a set of options for tripmaking that is more diverse and environmentally and socially sustainable. Susan oversees all IMR projects.


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