Browsing by Author "Zakaria akkari"
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Item Aviation Sector Recovery After Covid-19(2025-12-22) Imene messamah; Zakaria akkari; Samira LaabedThis contribution aims to analyse the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic on the global aviation sector and to identify the recovery pathways that have reshaped this vital industry. It seeks to highlight the scale of the decline in air transport demand and the resulting severe financial losses incurred by airlines, alongside examining the health and regulatory restrictions and their effects on operations, as well as analysing the repercussions of the crisis on employment and aviation supply chains.Item Retour sur l’expérience de l’Algérie en matière de sécurité routière(Université Batna 1, 2025-12-22) Houria Bencherif; Zakaria akkari; Imene messamahCette communication propose une lecture globale de l’expérience algérienne en matière de sécurité routière, à travers le diagnostic de la situation des accidents de la circulation et la mesure de leurs impacts sociaux et économiques, l’analyse du cadre juridique et réglementaire, ainsi que l’étude du rôle des infrastructures et du comportement des usagers de la route. Elle évalue également les programmes gouvernementaux, les initiatives locales, l’intégration des technologies intelligentes, ainsi que les actions de formation, de sensibilisation et d’éducation routière dans le relèvement du niveau de conscience collective.Item The Role of Digitization in Enhancing the Governance of Public Transportation Services(Université Batna 1, 2025-12-22) Zakaria akkari; Naima SlimaniThis paper addresses the role of digitization in strengthening the governance of public transport services as one of the prominent axes in the reform of public utilities and the improvement of service quality in contemporary cities, especially in developing countries such as Algeria, which faces increasing pressures resulting from urban growth and the expanding demand for mobility. The paper starts from the premise that governance in public transport is an administrative system based on transparency, accountability, and participation, then discusses how the rapid development of digital technologies, such as fleet-tracking systems, open data, and mobility-service platforms, has changed the way networks are planned, managed, and monitored, and what opportunities this offers to reduce the imbalances of traditional regulation associated with corruption, weak information, and the dispersion of actors.