Individual and contextual socioeconomic disadvantages and car driving between 16 and 24 years of age : a multilevel study in the Rhône Département (France).

Author(s)
Licaj, I. Haddak, M. Pochet, P. & Chiron, M.
Year
Abstract

This paper sets out to highlight and quantify the effect of individual and contextual deprivation on both access to a car driving licence and on actual driving of a car among young licence-holders in the Rhône Département (France). The three stages by which adolescents and very young adults become autonomous with regard to driving have been subjected to multilevel analyses, using a Household Travel Survey: (i) whether young persons participate in the early driving scheme at 16–17 years of age, (ii) whether young persons of 18–24 years of age hold a driving licence, and (iii) whether young licence-holders actually drive a car. At these three stages, social inequalities can be observed. This study highlights the considerable impact socioeconomic (individual but also contextual) factors and gender have on inequalities of access to car driving. Underprivileged groups suffer from disadvantages that accumulate at each stage (driving licence and car driving). The multilevel analysis of access to the car among young persons shows that considering the effects of the geographical context improves our understanding of travel inequalities. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20121030 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Journal of Transport Geography, Vol. 22 (May 2012), p. 19-27, 41 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.