Date and Time: Wednesday, July 12, 2023: 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM
Kim Watts
Program Manager, Passenger Transportation, Coalition for Reimagined Mobility
Presentation Description
To enable public acceptance and policy development of CASE technologies, it is important to translate what these broad societal benefits of CASE would specifically mean for ordinary people living in the United States, who live in different locations and have different economic circumstances and differing levels of access to technology. Specifically, how might CASE and associated technology developments transform ordinary people’s accessibility to economic opportunity, social interaction, education, healthcare and goods and services?
To better understand how to answer the question of how mobility innovation can specifically benefit ordinary people, the ReMo policy team analyzed key demographic statistics and trends and identified ten profiles of average United States residents.
Speaker Biography
Kim is Passenger Transportation Program Manager at the Coalition for Reimagined Mobility. She brings many years of varied international experience in legal practice, academic research, the non-profit sector, regulatory projects and consulting. At ReMo she undertakes policy research and analysis on topics across connected, cooperative and autonomous mobility, Mobility as a Service, mobility business models and regulatory innovation. Her doctoral research at the University of Antwerp was an international study of alternative liability systems and their application to large social risks and mobility developments, including automated vehicles and micromobility.