L’enracinement social de la mortalité routière. [The social determinants of road accident fatalities.]

Auteur(s)
Grossetête, M.
Jaar
Samenvatting

There are no official statistics in France establishing a correlation between road fatalities and social origins, while this correlation is demonstrably objective. The remarkable absence of data about the occupation of victims of road accidents contributes to giving credit to the commonplace idea that getting injured or dying in a road accident is only related to the haphazard nature of individual mobility and that with the exception of young men, we are all equal in terms of road mortality. Yet, road mortality does not occur randomly. Working class drivers are over-represented among those who die on the road while drivers from the upper middle class are under-represented. And while the poorest die on the road amidst collective indifference, the social fact of road mortality is not viewed as a social problem. Rather it is made visible only as an issue emptied from its social content and viewed through the prism of the driver’s individual responsibility. (Author/publisher)

Publicatie

Bibliotheeknummer
20101850 ST [electonic version only]
Uitgave

Actes de la Recherche en Sciences Sociales, No. 184 (avril 2010), ISBN 9782021030297, p. 38-57

Onze collectie

Deze publicatie behoort tot de overige publicaties die we naast de SWOV-publicaties in onze collectie hebben.