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2 Stud. Ethics L. & Tech. 1 (2008)

handle is hein.journals/selt2 and id is 1 raw text is: 




Evans: Death in Traffic


INTRODUCTION
Annually  1.2 million human beings are killed on the world's roads.' Most of the
victims are young, and prior to their crashes were healthy with expected normal
life spans in normal health. Most are not drivers -- worldwide most victims are
pedestrians. Injuries vastly outnumber fatalities. Traffic harm flows from many
decisions made  at many levels, from individual road users to leaders of industry
and government.  The  decisions are steeped in ethical issues, yet ethical issues are
largely ignored. Indeed, the only relevant paper I could find in the professional
literature begins Philosophers should begin to think more seriously about the
many  moral issues that arise from our frequent use of personal motor vehicles.2
    Discussing  any  aspect of traffic should be  based  on knowledge   of  its
characteristics. One cannot discuss, say, the ethics of a medical procedure unless
you have  knowledge  of what condition it addresses, what alternative options are
available, what are its risks of success, what are its risks of making the patient
more  sick, and so on.  The  source of such knowledge  is scientific inquiry, as
reported in scientific literature. All too often traffic safety policy makers think
that they are experts on traffic safety simply because they drive. They would be
ridiculed if they claimed expertise in pulmonology because they breathe.  Any
discussion of ethical issues in traffic safety must rest upon what is known from
science about the subject.
    Traffic safety has been studied as a scientific subject for more than 70 years,
with a large body  of reliable information accumulated in many  peer-reviewed
technical journals. For example, a paper submitted to the American  Journal of
Psychology  in August  1937 contains insights that are often ignored today, and
references to  even  earlier work.3   The  body   of scientific information is
summarized  in a book4 that will be a key source for this article.
    Traffic safety research establishes that vehicle characteristics affect safety,
but not nearly as much as roadway factors. Roadway  factors do not affect safety
nearly as much  as human  factors, especially the behavior of drivers. It is the
behavior of those whose  lives are at stake in traffic that most influences risk in
traffic. The least safe vehicle driven on the least safe road by some drivers poses
far less risk than the safest vehicle driven on the safest road by other drivers.
    While  it is easy to say that drivers have a personal moral responsibility to not
harm  others, this ignores wider issues. Do drivers adequately understand that
their normal driving poses an unreasonable  threat to others? If not, why not?
Have  drivers been misinformed?  If so, by whom, and for what purposes? While
the individual driver is the final agent, other institutions contribute hugely to how
individual drivers behave, and accordingly bear a major moral responsibility for
traffic harm.


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