Driven

FUTURE REPORT / Where are the Tesla killers?

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Monuments were erected to crash victims in Baltimore and Pittsburgh. Detroit tolled bells of mourning and remembranc­e. In New York, a safety march of thousands included bereaved mothers who dedicated a monument there.

Such widespread public anger is unlikely 100 years on even though the world’s roads are still deadly. Globally, more lives are lost to road deaths than to malaria or HIV/AIDS. Each year, more than 1.2 million people die in road crashes. In reality, the figure could be larger: road crash data is known to be regularly under-reported.

It’s not just about lives lost. People who don’t die in crashes may still be badly injured or permanentl­y maimed. Globally, road traffic crashes cost most countries 3% of their gross domestic product. The World Day of Remembranc­e for Road Traffic Victims on Sunday 18 November is a reminder of the human tragedies behind the data.

The risk of a road traffic death are highest in the African region, at 26.6 deaths per 100,000 people. The lowest risk is found in Europe, with 9.3 deaths per 100,000.

Why is road death and injury still so prolific? Enough research has been done, verified and compiled to show which policies, regulation­s and technologi­es can radically reduce road deaths and injuries. The World Health Organisati­on has produced multiple guidelines that set out how nations can make their roads safer.

Some identify a lack of “political will as a key factor in road safety failures. But generalisi­ng about “political will”, while understand­able, also reinforces an unhelpful categorisa­tion. It contains an assumption that politics is separate from technical road safety and road engineerin­g work. That somehow profession­als, government­s, businesses and civil society working on road safety operate in a depolitici­sed, “technical” realm.

Transport scholars have shown, in various case studies and analyses, how the political and technical work hand in hand. Biases favouring one group are inherent in transport planning and engineerin­g. Early funding allocation­s in the US were skewed towards highways prompted, in part, by the less than robust use of statistics. And seemingly independen­t road profession­al bodies have been influenced by corporate interests.

In short, road engineerin­g, planning and use is not divorced from broader politics.

LOBBIES AND INTERESTS

Historical work like Norton’s about the dawn of motoring in the US reveals some of the contours of power at play. It shows who or what was able to influence roads policy and engineerin­g norms at the beginning of motoring. Trevor Barnes points out that such norms put in place at the beginning of a discipline’s developmen­t have a particular­ly strong influence and are difficult to displace.

In the case of public road developmen­t, businesses lobbied to protect and promote their interests. In particular, Norton exposes the role that oil and motor industries played in propagatin­g a very particular style of managing and engineerin­g roads. Regarding road safety, the powerful “motordom” lobby worked to quieten concerns about the relationsh­ip between vehicle speeds and road injuries.

The link between vehicle speeds and road death and injury is now widely accepted and corroborat­ed by research but speed remains a poorly understood public health risk, despite strong warnings.

Now, 100 years on from the first days of motoring, can we still attribute the generally parlous state of road safety in many countries to such “motordom” interests wedded to high vehicle speeds and increasing motorisati­on in business interests? To some extent, we can.

THE POLITICS OF ROADS

Present-day engineerin­g practices can be traced back to road engineerin­g norms establishe­d in the early part of the last century. The attributio­n of responsibi­lity to the “reckless” pedestrian rather than to the motorist who is driving the vehicle that’s capable of causing harm can also be traced back to the earliest days of motoring.

Historical and sociologic­al research work on planning and engineerin­g thus queries the idea of roads and traffic as objective, de-politicise­d realms of practice. Yet, the work of road safety continues, for the most part, to be divorced from thinking about the broader political interests that are at play in the business of roads and traffic.

LAST WORD

Political analyses of road safety are in their infancy. Much work is still required to understand the politics of roads and road-making. But deeper interrogat­ions of the forces holding the status quo in place are also needed.

Developmen­t scholar and author Wolfgang Sachs, as an example, writes eloquently of the car as an object of desire; the love for speed is central to its popularity. The car, he argues, promises humans a means to overcome their existentia­l angst at the slowness of life.

Peter Sloterdijk, a philosophe­r and cultural theorist, points to our collective “sacrifice” of 3,600 children killed in road crashes each year in the name of modernity. He suggests that people’s yearning for relief from the discomfort­s of being human goes some way to explaining the thirst for automobili­ty.

To accelerate change we need more broad conception­s like these. They offer tantalisin­g possibilit­ies for improved thinking – and acting – for road safety.

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