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    • Street appropriation
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  • Systemic Traffic Violence

    On how we frame systemic traffic violence and why that matters!

    MINI LECTURE [1/16]

    How do we frame systemic traffic violence: As glitches in the machine or as unacceptable human tragedies?

    Based on the Open Access paper: https://t.co/sE2wCrnJ6d
    (pic via @EdwardLamb) pic.twitter.com/tm7UpQUByI

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [2/16]

    Traffic violence represents the largest threat to life and limb that most people in contemporary, car-based society experience on a daily basis in public space.

    (statistics of @WHO) pic.twitter.com/zMfBkks4ke

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [3/16]

    With this magnitude of violence and relatively limited attention it receives, we seem to have collectively accepted it as a tolerable price for our car-based society.

    (cartoon by @Avidor) pic.twitter.com/RyHqLNk3Em

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [4/16]

    Over time the problem has been reconfigured, in part thanks to statistical discourse, from a moral wrong to a necessary evil. With standardized statistics making “saving lives” the logical moral purpose of traffic safety.
    (Vardi 2012)

    (graph from @decorrespondent) pic.twitter.com/KJBxglEse8

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [5/16]

    The naturalization and denial of vehicular violence have allowed car deaths to become largely invisible relative to their horrific ubiquity, shielding it from any substantial critique (Culver 2018)

    (deaths (left) & injured (right) via https://t.co/MIzrhTdYdt) pic.twitter.com/SFbpVh2PT1

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [6/16]

    Paul Virilio (1999) argues instead that we should actively zoom in on the violence to learn: “the unexpectedness and unforeseen nature of an accident makes visible what mostly stays below the surface”. pic.twitter.com/jkzBylyfKy

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [7/16]

    How media reports events of traffic violence, through syntax and vocabulary, strongly influences beliefs and attitudes of the general audience as found by @kmralph@DrTaraGoddard, @cgthigpen & @EvanIacobucci: https://t.co/6kAFsRPFuS

    (cartoon: Its Media by David Suter) pic.twitter.com/qHB7RBpI1x

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [8/16]

    What frame do Dutch newspapers impose on traffic violence?
    😪 Justice-based showing human tragedies?
    🎛 Efficiency-based showing glitches of the machine?

    (image: Leila, mother of three children killed by car driver :https://t.co/ljKpTbFVnm) pic.twitter.com/K0UXaY02Uu

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [9/16]

    “Pedestrian injured due to collision with truck in Ede”

    Of 368 newspaper headlines collected in one week of Dutch news:
    👉 Most mention a PERSON as victim
    👉 Often omit the 2nd party
    👉 Or refer to it as VEHICLE pic.twitter.com/yDSsM7zT45

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [10/16]

    “Cyclist injured in crash with car”

    Of 252 reports of crashes between at least two parties:
    👉 70% talk about a victim as a person
    👉 70% talk about a secondary party as vehicle pic.twitter.com/U9PrxgyNF6

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [11/16]

    In 70 articles a cyclist/pedestrian and a motor vehicle were involved. In their headlines:
    👉 Most use a passive, non-agentive syntax
    👉 The vulnerable road user is injured/killed
    👉 Only 6 suggest that a human actively hurt another human pic.twitter.com/J64BVqtfhl

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [12/16]

    The vast majority (92%) of articles only factually describe the crash without referring to any pattern. There are almost no links with larger systemic health and safety issues that are related to traffic violence.

    (pictures via: https://t.co/piPrXk1WtQ) pic.twitter.com/g5D0y3BIZ1

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [13/16]

    Reporting highlights crashes that have a strong visual impact and/or impact on traffic (i.e. congestion/road closures). The human element is largely absent. pic.twitter.com/3EqFfJieeu

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [14/16]

    This factuality resembles more the reporting of daily weather forecasts than human interest stories.

    This is further strengthened by referring to most events as ‘Accidents’ instead of 'Crashes'. pic.twitter.com/hO71SqiMXL

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [15/16]

    Instead of human tragedies, traffic crashes are presented as glitches in the machine – dehumanized interferences with the overall functioning of a well-oiled machine, where effects on traffic flow trump impacts on the people involved.

    (Charlie Chaplin – Modern Times) pic.twitter.com/70NQBDHX76

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020

    [16/16]

    This creates the impression that a crash just happened to somebody, that it is an automated, unpreventable effect of the traffic machine.

    A malfunctioning of an unstoppable machine, rather than the result of avoidable factors.

    Read full paper: https://t.co/sE2wCrnJ6d pic.twitter.com/H2JSGggkg0

    — Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) October 23, 2020
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