Traffic safety.

Author(s)
Evans, L.
Year
Abstract

Traffic Safety applies the methods of science to better understand one of the world’s most pressing public health problems. More than a million people are killed annually in traffic worldwide. The present book covers many safety policy topics. It goes to the heart of the problem, with unconstrained analyses of the inadequacies of government in one of its chief responsibilities – to protect life. A dramatic development since the earlier book is that the United States has fallen far behind other countries in traffic safety. Prior to the mid 1960s, the US had the world’s safest traffic. By 2002 it had dropped from first to sixteenth place in deaths per registered vehicle, and from first to tenth place in deaths for the same distance of travel. Over 200,000 more Americans were killed in traffic than would have died if the US had matched the safety progress in such better performing countries as Britain, Canada, or Australia. This topic is treated in detail, and explanations are offered for the ongoing US failure. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20050041 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Bloomfield Hills, MI, Science Serving Society, 2004, XIV + 445 p., 619 ref. - ISBN 0-9754871-0-8

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.