The driver, the road, the rules... and the rest? A systems-based approach to young driver road safety

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Abstract

The persistent overrepresentation of young drivers in road crashes is universally recognised. A multitude of factors influencing their behaviour and safety have been identified through methods including crash analyses, simulated and naturalistic driving studies, and self-report measures. Across the globe numerous, diverse, countermeasures have been implemented; the design of the vast majority of these has been informed by a driver-centric approach. An alternative approach gaining popularity in transport safety is the systems approach which considers not only the characteristics of the individual, but also the decisions and actions of other actors within the road transport system, along with the interactions amongst them. This paper argues that for substantial improvements to be made in young driver road safety, what has been learnt from driver-centric research needs to be integrated into a systems approach, thus providing a holistic appraisal of the young driver road safety problem. Only then will more effective opportunities and avenues for intervention be realised.

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Scott-Parker, B., Goode, N., & Salmon, P. (2015). The driver, the road, the rules... and the rest? A systems-based approach to young driver road safety. Accident Analysis and Prevention, 74, 297–305. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aap.2014.01.027

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