Construction and operation of cross-boundary transportation infrastructure is a challenge at the local, state, and international levels.Trends in travel patterns show increases in travel demand in both the United States and Europe resulting in greater attention to cross-boundary infrastructure and services.In the United States, this challenge has arisen most frequently in provision regional transit services and infrastructure while Europe is faced with a challenge of connecting its member-states.One question that remains unknown is whether when governments are faced with providing cross-boundary infrastructure or services, do they develop similar organizational arrangements when meeting these challenges regardless of what level of government is involved?This research asks whether governments at all levels of governance develop similar organizational solutions in the construction and operation of transport infrastructure.This question is answered through an examination of regional transit provision in seven U.S. metropolitan areas, six commuter rail systems in the United States, a series of bi-state river highway bridges in the United States, and five cross-border segments of the Trans-European Transport Network in the European Union, three similar organizational arrangements types were found to govern cross-boundary provision of transportation infrastructure and/or services.These three types, an independent entity, an intergovernmental agreement or contract, or direct financial payment, were found at all levels of governance.The research suggests that there is a relationship between the complexity of the service involved the level of financial control indicating that more complex operations such as network of services requiring day-to-day operation tend to be arranged as independent entities with various levels of public and/or private financing.
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Organizational Arrangements for the Provision of Cross-Boundary Transport Infrastructure and Services