Files

Abstract

In the context of a global health crisis, digital tools play a growing role in daily lives of students and working people. Many people now work from home and study online. Do these virtual exchanges replace spatial mobility? To answer this question in this article, we focus on individual trade-offs in terms of travel choices and, more specifically, in terms of travel time. Based on the work of Y. Zahavi and the hypothesis he made of the stability of time budgets on a daily scale, we question the relevance of an extension of the thinking to the weekly stability of these time budgets (with and without the weekend) and also to the stability of the perceived time budgets. Our challenge in this article is to better understand individual choice logics to ensure more efficient political measures.

Details

PDF