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Sharing road safety education and enforcement knowledge and practice throughout developing nations - challenges create opportunities!
Author(s) -
Ray Shuey
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of the australasian college of road safety
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1832-9497
DOI - 10.33492/jacrs-d-18-00259
Subject(s) - enforcement , law enforcement , trainer , public relations , business , language change , project commissioning , poison control , transport engineering , publishing , engineering , political science , law , medicine , environmental health , computer science , art , literature , programming language
This paper presents a practitioner’s perspective of implementing road safety strategies in low and middle-income countries. It identifies a gap in traffic law enforcement capability and describes professional development train the trainer programs to build capacity. The costs and benefits of road safety reform are raised in conjunction with the need to provide adequate funding to support the behavioural change of drivers. Understanding the challenges of piecemeal reform, policing capability, corruption and under-reporting of crashes provides opportunities to use this knowledge to impact behavioural change and road trauma reduction. The findings confirm education and enforcement as a successful methodology for reform as well as the need to create the perception of certainty of being caught and punished when breaking the law.

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