Index

Traffic Safety Culture

ISBN: 978-1-78714-618-1, eISBN: 978-1-78714-617-4

Publication date: 12 April 2019

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2019), "Index", Ward, N.J., Watson, B. and Fleming-Vogl, K. (Ed.) Traffic Safety Culture, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 329-345. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78714-617-420191020

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019 Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Accessibility universals
, 256

Accuracy
, 69

Active management by exception
, 195–196

Active strategies
, 12

Adolescent driving
, 14

Adolescent sexual risk behaviors
, 119

Agents
, 7

Alcohol use
, 50

“All or nothing” phenomenon
, 298

Altruism
, 158

Anthropological approaches to culture
, 264

Anthropologists
, 193, 265

Anti-drink-driving advertising campaigns
, 279–282, 287

Anti-federalists
, 134

Anti-speeding advertising campaigns
, 283–288

“Apfel, Zitrone” intervention
, 59

Apprehension-based traffic law enforcement practices
, 125–126

Artifacts
, 32, 184

symbols
, 183

Association for Safe International Road Travel (ASIRT)
, 9

Assumptions
, 27, 77

Attitudes
, 27, 42–43, 72–73, 97–99

attitude-oriented indicators
, 118

and behavior relations
, 300

implicit and explicit attitudes
, 50

instrumental and emotional components of
, 50

Auditing
, 237

Australasian New Car Assessment Program (ANCAP)
, 233

Australian experience
, 276

changing communication landscape
, 288–291

drink driving and speeding
, 279–288

road safety advertising’s role from TSC perspective
, 276–278

Australian jurisdictions
, 280

Australian National Survey of Community Attitudes to Road Safety
, 284

Australian road safety campaigns
, 310

Australian Transport Council (ATC)
, 146, 275

Automotive technology organization
, 238–239, 242

Avant-garde medical text
, 10

Backward-looking responsibility
, 48

Band-Aid® solutions
, 225

Basic Fatigue Management (BFM)
, 243

Beach Roads (advertisement)
, 285

Behavioral change techniques (BCTs)
, 51

Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS)
, 69

Behavioral/behavior(s)
, 27, 32, 44, 70, 71, 97, 192–193, 199

associations between PWM constructs
, 52–54

behavior-based interventions
, 225

beliefs
, 27, 45, 49, 73, 267–268, 304

change
, 49–50, 135–137, 225–226

civic virtue
, 158

costs
, 223

disentangling factors determining
, 49

factors derived from PWM
, 54

factors derived from TPB
, 50–52

hazards
, 130

health-related
, 46, 52

health-risk
, 46

informing interventions to change
, 85–87

level of internalized values
, 54–57

prevalence of
, 79–82

relationships between
, 82–84

self-monitoring
, 246

Beliefs
, 32

acceptance
, 28

behavioral
, 27, 45, 49, 73, 267–268, 304

control
, 27, 45, 49, 57, 76–77, 268–269, 304

effects
, 28

elicitation studies
, 304

evaluation
, 28

informing interventions to change
, 85–87

normative
, 45, 49, 75–76, 268, 304

origins
, 26–29

prevalence of
, 79–82

relationships between
, 82–84

religious
, 266–267

systems
, 25–26, 27

Belonging
, 291

“Best practice” approach
, 239

in workplace road safety
, 224

Billboards
, 288

Blood alcohol content (BAC)
, 279

Booze Bus (advertisement)
, 280

Borkenstein’s Grand Rapids study results
, 266

Bottom-up intervention
, 225

Brain Drain–Drinking Kills Driving Skills (advertisement)
, 279

“Brake fade”
, 234

Brasilia Declaration
, 253–254

“Buddy” training system
, 235

Bureaucratic cultures
, 155

Bush Telegraph
, 282

Business targets
, 239

Calculative safety culture
, 154

Calculative stage
, 154

Causal connection
, 118

Causation
, 48

Causes, Ecology and Prevention of Traffic Accidents, The (Roberts)
, 10

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
, 4–5, 8

Centralization
, 182

Chain of Responsibility (CoR)
, 229, 230

for safety
, 239

Change Curve program
, 206–208

Change management
, 202

and changing culture
, 201–203

Changing communication landscape
, 288–291

Civic republicanism
, 134

Civic virtue behavior
, 158

Civil Rights Act
, 136

Classic epidemiological triad
, 6–7

Cognitive appraisal processes in persuasion
, 307–309

Cognitive component
, 118–119

Cognitive costs
, 223

Collaborative leadership
, 182

Commercial heavy vehicle fleets
, 229

Communication
, 43–44, 55

changing communication landscape
, 288–291

dimension
, 209

solid communication process
, 200

Communicator
, 44

Community
, 134–135, 202

behavior
, 174

community-based policy and program initiatives
, 131

community-nursing organization
, 242

transport organization
, 235

See also Consensus oriented community participation

Community culture
, 130

supporting change in space between
, 183–185

Community level
, 179

objectives
, 178

Community participation central role in Traffic Safety Culture (TSC)

created and consensus oriented community participation
, 137–141

current conditions and possibilities of participation
, 131–137

safety culture
, 130

Compliance
, 44–46

direct means of gaining
, 269

interventions at level of
, 58–59

Compliance and Enforcement legislation (C&E legislation)
, 230

Computerized in-vehicle early warning systems
, 14

Connectedness, sense of
, 291

Conscientiousness
, 158

Consensus oriented community participation
, 137

conditions
, 139–140

developing criteria
, 140

generate options
, 140

weigh options against criteria
, 141

Contemporary partisanship
, 135

Contingent reward
, 196

management
, 196

Control

over behavior
, 269

beliefs
, 27, 45, 49, 57, 76–77, 268–269, 304

control-averse culture
, 99

over outcomes
, 269

Coordination technique
, 177

Coping appraisal
, 308

Corporate social responsibilities
, 227, 240–241

strategies
, 240

Could peer-to-peer education
, 126

Courtesy
, 158

Crash

critical reason for
, 24

factors
, 24–25

road
, 222

traffic
, 23–24, 222

Critical beliefs analysis
, 304

Critical self-reflection
, 260

Cross-cultural scope
, 260

“Cultivate self-directed responsibility for safety”
, 161

Cultural/culture
, 32–33, 98, 119, 130, 183, 186, 192, 201, 224–225

attitudes
, 117

changes
, 201–202, 206, 225, 239

control-averse
, 99

cultural-based interventions
, 276

culture-based approach
, 34, 88, 276

factor
, 97

functions
, 31

implications
, 186–187

leadership and relationship to
, 192–194

management
, 238–240

and resistance to change
, 202–203

of safety
, 6–9, 11–13

symbolic behavior
, 136–137

Cynicism
, 131

Data collection
, 236, 237

Day-to-day basis
, 232

De facto role of government
, 269

Decade of Action for Road Safety
, 253

Decision-making
, 132–133, 140, 147, 240, 300

Democracy
, 134–135

Demographic variables
, 303

Department of Transportation (DOT)
, 138

Descriptive norms
, 45

Deterrence, perceptions of
, 279

Differential self-identification process
, 30

Digital technology interventions
, 59

Direct democracy
, 134

Direct means of gaining compliance
, 269

Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALYs)
, 3

Disc brakes
, 234

Discouraging unsafe behavior
, 225

Distractions
, 14

“Division of labor”
, 448

Domains
, 175, 179

Drink driving
, 278–288

Drive after using cannabis (DUIC)
, 86

Drivers
, 120

behavior
, 15, 24–25

education
, 96

licensing
, 96

from organizations
, 225

Driving
, 223

drink
, 278–288

experience
, 51–52

force
, 153

primary task of
, 223

safety culture and safety climate in
, 149–152

Driving under the influence of cannabis (DUIC)
, 70, 82

Ecological models
, 300

Ecology-based model
, 35

Economic effect
, 119

Economic factor
, 133

Educative approaches
, 285

Efficiency
, 185, 225

Eight-stage change process (Kotter’s (1996) model)
, 204–206

Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM)
, 301

Electronic Braking Systems (EBS)
, 231

Embeddedness
, 182

Emotion(al)

attitude
, 99

components of attitudes
, 50

emotion-based health advertising campaigns
, 305

of fear
, 310

in persuasion
, 305–306

responses
, 278

Empirical evidence
, 121–124

Employee retention
, 243

Employer–organization relationship
, 152

Enforcement of rules
, 96

Engagement
, 130–131

social
, 134–135

Enjoy the Ride campaign
, 287

Environment factors
, 7

Equipment standards
, 232–234

Ethnographic research
, 265

Ethnography, classical approach to
, 265

European Agency for Safety and Health at Work (ESAW)
, 146

European car drivers

acceptance of safety technology and enforcement
, 99, 108

experienced and self-exerted behavioral control
, 107, 110

factor analysis
, 107

factor solutions and related total variance
, 106

factor structure
, 99

individual safety-relevant behavior
, 110

perceptions of road users safety performance
, 107–108

personal concern
, 108

principal component analysis
, 105

relationship between TSC and road safety outcomes
, 108–109, 113–114

risk attitudes
, 106–107, 109

SARTRE
, 4, 96–97

survey items to operational concept
, 98–105

See also Traffic safety culture (TSC)

European Commission’s recommendations
, 97

European culture
, 260–261

European Framework Program for Research and Technological Development
, 96

Exchange behavior
, 152

Exclusion criterion
, 123

Exercise of power in Europe
, 258–259

Existential universals
, 257

Expectations
, 45

Experienced behavioral control
, 107, 110

Explicit attitudes
, 50

Extended Parallel Process Model (EPPM)
, 301, 307–308

External policies
, 231

Fatality
, 146

Fatigue management
, 230, 235

Fear
, 306

appeals
, 278, 306

fear-based approaches
, 277

Fear, uncertainty, and doubt (FUD)
, 202

Federal Office of Road Safety (FORS)
, 282

Financial threat
, 278, 281

Five-star-rated vehicles
, 233

Fleet management
, 236

Flywheel effect
, 210–211

Folk theories
, 136

Formative evaluation
, 311

Formative interviews
, 76–77

Former appraisal
, 307

Forward-looking responsibility
, 48

Foucault’s approach
, 258, 259

Foundational approaches to change
, 203

eight-stage change process
, 204–206

phases of planned change
, 203–204

4WD operator
, 237

Framing hypothesis of theory
, 308

Freight operators
, 236

Freight routes
, 231

Freight services organization
, 242

Friends don’t let friends drink and drive campaign
, 282, 288

Full-range leadership model
, 194

transactional leadership
, 195–196

transformational leadership
, 196–198

Functional

dimensions
, 57–60

magnetic resonance imaging
, 202–203

markets
, 177

universals
, 256–257

G-force events
, 238

Gains
, 308

in road safety
, 225

Gamification
, 59

Generative safety culture
, 154

Geography
, 96

Global Plan for Decade of Action
, 254

Governmentality
, 258–261

Grades drivers
, 239

Gross Vehicle Mass (GVM)
, 231

Habits
, 57

formation
, 52

Habitualization
, 51–52

Haddon Matrix framework
, 8

Hazards

behavioral
, 130

domain systems
, 175

system
, 130

Health

behavior change
, 300

behaviors
, 49

health-related advertising messages
, 300

health-related behaviors
, 46, 52

health-risk behaviors
, 46

and safety
, 141

Healthy People, and Objectives for the Nation
, 7

Healthy People 2020
, 7–8

Heath & Heath (2010)
, 211

Heavy vehicle

fleets
, 229–231

operators
, 235–236

Heavy Vehicle National Law Act 2012 (HVNL)
, 229, 231

Helmets
, 97

High-income countries (HICs)
, 252, 261

transfer of HIC best practice in development agenda
, 253–254

High-risk driver behaviors
, 68

Highly risk-motivated group
, 303

HIV/AIDs risk behaviors
, 301

Host factors
, 7

Human behavior
, 25

Humanitarian crisis for low- and middle-income countries (LMICs)
, 253

Humor
, 308, 309

Humorous approaches
, 310

Idealized influence
, 197

Identification
, 44–45

interventions at level of
, 59

and PWM
, 46–47

Immigration
, 15

Immunization programs
, 4

Implicit association test (IAT)
, 50

Implicit attitudes
, 50

In-vehicle telematics systems
, 237

Individual(ism)
, 98–99, 120, 185

individual-level factors
, 223

individualized attention
, 198

individualized consideration
, 198

initiative
, 159

responses
, 311–312

safety-relevant behavior
, 110

Industrialization
, 134–135

Industry-wide safety programs
, 240

Infectious diseases
, 4

Inflexible deadlines for drivers
, 230

Informing interventions to change beliefs and behaviors
, 85–87

Injunctive norms
, 45–46

Injury
, 146

Injury Control Research Centers (ICRCs)
, 8

Inspirational motivation
, 197, 201

Institutionalization culture
, 98

Institutionalized social order
, 106–107

Instrumental “best practice” programs
, 131

Instrumental attitude
, 99

Instrumental components of attitudes
, 50

Instrumentation strategy
, 123

Integrated media campaigns
, 299

Intellectual stimulation
, 198, 201

Intention
, 25–27, 71–72

Internal policies
, 232

culture management
, 238–240

equipment standards
, 232–234

hierarchy of road safety strategies
, 232

operations management
, 236–238

personnel behavior management
, 234–236

Internalization
, 44, 47–48

culture
, 98

interventions at level of
, 59–60

level of internalized values
, 54–57

Intervention
, 245

Interviewer-interviewee “transaction”
, 264

Investment oriented indicators
, 118

Join the Drive to Save Lives (JTD) campaign
, 289–290

Journey planning
, 236, 237

Karma
, 257, 268

Keep the Bromance Alive (advertisement)
, 288

Kelman’s experimental scheme
, 45

Laissez-faire leadership
, 194–195

Large-scale survey
, 96–97

Laser (advertisement)
, 285

Law enforcement
, 35, 68, 89, 125–126, 174, 259, 277

Leader
, 194, 198

Leadership
, 181–182

behaviors
, 193, 198

coaching
, 246

impact on organizational culture
, 194

impact on safety culture
, 194

management vs.
, 193

paradigm
, 196

and relationship to culture
, 192

skill
, 246

throughout organization
, 199–201

at top–full-range leadership model
, 194–198

Learning behavior
, 130

Legislated driver record-keeping requirements
, 230–231

Legitimacy
, 51, 132

Legitimize risky behavior
, 106–107

Level of compliance
, 261

Level of internalized values
, 54–55

mindfulness
, 56–57

safety ethos
, 55–56

Levels of attitudinal change
, 43

attitudes
, 44–45

compliance and TPB
, 45–46

degree of attitudinal change
, 43–44

identification and prototype willingness model
, 46–47

internalization, mindfulness, and ethos of safety
, 47–48

Levels of value integration
, 42–43

Levels of value internalization
, 43, 58

Leveraging behavior change
, 266

Light vehicle fleets
, 231–232

Linear regression models
, 84

Logbook or similar system
, 234

“Loss”
, 308

Low-and middle-income countries (LMICs)
, 252, 257

application of Traffic Safety Culture (TSC) to
, 258

broader context of traffic safety in
, 261–263

humanitarian crisis for
, 253

methodologies for characterizing and measuring TSC
, 263–266

specific considerations for TSC application to
, 266–269

variations among specific characteristics in
, 258–266

Low-level speeding
, 286

Mandatory driver induction training programs
, 235

Maritime survey and consultancy organization
, 243

Market theory
, 177

Mass limit violations
, 230

Mates Motel campaign
, 282

Meaning search process
, 28

“Mental scaffolding”
, 25

Message

mediums
, 289

message (content)-related characteristics
, 305–310

outcomes
, 312–313

self-efficacy
, 308

“Message acceptance”
, 307, 308

“Message rejection”
, 307, 308

Meta-analysis
, 299

Metallurgical coal miner and exporter organization
, 241

Mindfulness
, 47–48, 56–57

Mobile radar (advertisement)
, 285

Mobility
, 96–97

Moral action
, 201

Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD)
, 10

Motor Accident Commission (South Australia)
, 288

Motor vehicle

injuries
, 5–9

travel
, 5, 13

“Motorization” of America
, 5

Multi-sector coordination
, 11

Multifactor Leadership Questionnaire instrument (MLQ instrument)
, 197

Multiple message mediums
, 289

Muscle cars
, 120

National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC)
, 8

National contextual factors
, 96

National Driver Work Diary System
, 230–231

National Heavy Vehicle Regulator (NHVR)
, 230–231

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)
, 8–9

National Highway Transportation Administration
, 173–174

National meteorological authority
, 233, 235, 237, 239

National Motor Vehicle Crash Causation Survey (NMVCCS)
, 24

National Road Safety Partnership Program (NRSPP)
, 226

Negative approaches in road safety
, 309–310

Negative images
, 54

Network Administrative Organization (NAO)
, 178–181

Network leadership
, 181–182

Network response

change in space between organizational and community cultures
, 183–185

complex environment of traffic safety
, 174–177

implications of networks and culture for change and development
, 186–187

network coordination structure
, 177–181

operational features
, 181–182

Neutralization techniques
, 106–107, 110

No accident/the wife (advertisement)
, 286

Nonsupportive culture
, 152

Nontraditional stakeholders
, 33

Normative beliefs
, 45, 49, 75–76, 268, 304

Normative elements
, 50–51

Normative rationale
, 133–135

Nowhere to hide campaign
, 280

Occupational driving
, 223

On-board telematics
, 237

One-way broadcasting approaches
, 288

Online campaigns
, 288–291

Online communication
, 288

Only a little bit over campaign
, 280

Open-ended continuous process
, 206

Operating costs
, 241–243

Operations management
, 236–238

Optimism bias
, 51

Organization culture
, 130, 183–185

Organization(al)

assumes responsibility
, 199–200

challenges
, 200

change in space between community cultures and
, 183–185

change programs
, 206

citizenship behavior
, 153

compliance
, 159

culture
, 202

design and development
, 208–209

flywheel effect
, 210–211

leadership
, 155, 194, 199

leading change at level
, 208–209

loyalty
, 159

mastering change curve
, 206–208

moral action
, 201

participates in transformation
, 200–201

recent thoughts on change models in
, 209

safety participation
, 153–155

safety research
, 150

scenario thinking
, 211–213

serves
, 200

transformation
, 201, 210

Organizational citizenship behavior (OCB)
, 155

dimensions of safety citizenship behavior
, 158–160

research on safety citizenship behavior
, 156–158

safety citizenship behaviors, safety culture and safety climate
, 160–162

Outcome evaluation
, 312

Overconfidence
, 51

Paper system
, 147

Parallel Response Model (PRM)
, 307

Participation
, 131, 137–138

barriers to social and behavioral change
, 135–137

normative rationale
, 133–135

practical rationale
, 132–133

traffic safety as politics
, 131

Partisanship
, 135–136

Partnerships
, 174

Passive management by exception
, 195–196

Passive strategies
, 12

Past behavior role
, 51–52

Path analysis
, 56

Pathological safety culture
, 154

Perceived behavioral control
, 27, 76

Perceived norm
, 27

Perceived susceptibility
, 307, 311

Perception

perceptions of deterrence
, 279

risk
, 96–97

of road users safety performance
, 107–108

of seriousness of behavior
, 302

workers’ perceptions of role-behavior expectancies
, 225

Performance-Based Standards scheme (PBS scheme)
, 231

Personal acceptance of norms
, 51

Personal concern
, 108, 112

Personal susceptibility
, 307–308

Personnel behavior management
, 234–236

Persuasion

cognitive appraisal processes in
, 307–309

role of threats and emotion in
, 305–306

Physical environment
, 30, 130

Physical threat
, 281

of car crashes
, 278

physical-threat-based advertisements
, 285

Plan of Action
, 253

Planned change phases
, 203–204

Planning
, 237

Police Car (advertisement)
, 280

Political/politics

culture
, 134

effect
, 119

factor
, 133

political/organizational desirability
, 264

traffic safety as
, 131

Population-level road safety approaches
, 223

Portfolio approach
, 118

Positive approaches
, 309–310

Positive emotions
, 309

Positive images
, 54

Positive safety culture
, 239

Post-analysis of safety data
, 237–238

Practical rationale
, 132–133

Practitioners

implications for
, 125–126, 164

recommendations for
, 213–214

Pragmatic driving
, 261

Pragmatic trip scheduling
, 236

Pre-existing individual characteristics
, 302–304

Precursor event
, 26, 28

Prediction
, 32

Prevention strategies
, 223

Principal component analysis
, 105

Proactive safety

behaviors
, 161–162

culture
, 154

Proactive strategies
, 148, 162

Process evaluation
, 312

Profitability
, 225

Prospect Theory
, 308

Protection Motivation Theory (PMT)
, 307

Prototype willingness model (PWM)
, 46–47

associations between PWM constructs
, 52–54

factors derived from
, 54

Prototypical/prototypes
, 57

favorability
, 47

image
, 27, 73–75, 268

similarity
, 47

Psychological/psychology

models of decision making
, 46

qualitative research in
, 265

symbolic behavior
, 136–137

theories
, 42–43, 45

Psychosocial approaches
, 254–258

Public goods
, 177

Public health
, 4, 6–7

building culture of safety
, 11–13

Center for Disease Control (CDC)
, 8

defining traffic safety as problem
, 5

efforts in US
, 7

future challenges and opportunities
, 13

grassroots and global health contributions to traffic safety
, 9–10

Healthy People 2020
, 7–8

public health and highway safety collaboration
, 10–11

special populations
, 14–15

State Health Departments
, 9

technologies
, 14

trade-offs between safety and mobility
, 13–14

vision for traffic safety culture
, 6

Public organizations
, 180

Public policy maker
, 118

Quantification approach
, 56

Quantitative approach
, 56

Quarry supplier organization
, 241

Queensland Department of Transport and Main Roads
, 280, 282, 287, 289–290

Queensland Police Service
, 283

Queenslanders
, 290

Radio
, 288

advertising
, 289

Random breath testing (RBT)
, 279

Reactive safety culture
, 154

Reasoned path
, 46

Reciprocal Safety Culture Model
, 162

Reciprocal supervisor–employee relationship
, 153

Reconstruction campaign
, 286

Refreezing phase
, 204

Regression models
, 84–85

Regulatory control
, 231

Reinforcing approach
, 277, 279, 299

Reliability
, 69

Religious beliefs
, 266–267

Remuneration
, 239

Representativeness
, 69

Reputation
, 243–244

Resistance
, 207

to change
, 202–203

Response efficacy
, 285, 300, 305, 308, 311

Responsibility assumption
, 199–200

Restraint systems
, 97

Rider and elephant model
, 211

Risk

attitudes
, 106–107, 109

behavior
, 24–25, 60

driving
, 303

management
, 147–149

perceptions
, 96–97

Road crashes
, 222

Road fatalities and injuries
, 252

Road infrastructure development
, 254

Road safety
, 253

advertising’s role from TSC perspective
, 276–278

agencies
, 289

space for drunk driving in Ghana
, 264

space for helmet wearing in Vietnam
, 263

training
, 235

World Health Organization’s (WHO) Global Status Report
, 222

See also Workplace road safety

Road safety advertising campaigns
, 288, 297–298

design
, 299–310

evaluation
, 310–313

stated objectives
, 298

See also Workplace road safety

Road safety outcomes
, 108–109

results of regression analysis
, 114

standardized factor scores
, 113

Road Safety Space Model (RSSM)
, 261–263, 269

Road Traffic Act (2012)
, 229–230

Road Traffic Regulations (2014)
, 229–230

Road trauma
, 146, 222

Road users safety performance, perceptions of
, 107–108, 110

Roads and Transport Authority (RTA)
, 279

Robust

“knowledge bank” of tools and resources
, 226

maintenance
, 234

positive correlation
, 125

Role-behavior expectancies, workers’ perceptions of
, 225

Rough road surfaces
, 238

Safe behavior
, 269

Safe conduct
, 47

Safe system

approach
, 223–224, 226

thinking
, 224

Safeguarding compliance
, 59

Safer road(s)

and roadsides
, 224

users
, 224

Safer speeds
, 224, 287

Safer vehicles
, 224

Safety
, 43, 225

auditing
, 236

civic virtue
, 160

climate
, 160–162

compliance behaviors
, 161–162

ethos
, 47–48, 55–57

legislation
, 155

participation
, 151

policy and practice
, 225

programs
, 184

safety-check policy
, 234

safety-related risk management
, 156

technology and enforcement acceptance
, 99, 108

values
, 223

Safety citizenship behavior
, 146

complementary paradigm to safety culture
, 163

implications for practitioners
, 164

model
, 162

organizational citizenship behavior and
, 155–162

risk management
, 147–149

Social Exchange Theory
, 152–153

theory and practical application
, 152

Safety culture
, 130, 160–162, 225–226

behavior
, 146–147

dependent stage of
, 154

independent stage of
, 154

interdependent stage of
, 154

leadership’s impact
, 194

and level of organizational safety participation
, 153–155

and safety climate in driving safety
, 149–152

Safety Culture Maturity Model
, 153–155, 164

Save LIVES Road Safety Technical Package
, 254

Scenario thinking
, 211–213

Scientific disciplines
, 6

Seatbelts
, 302–303

See the Light campaign
, 280

Self-development
, 159

Self-enforcement
, 260

Self-exerted behavioral control
, 107, 110

Self-identity
, 29–31

Self-report survey
, 304

Self-reported behavior
, 66–67, 96

Senior management support
, 239

Shared belief system
, 32

Short Schwartz Value Survey (SSVS)
, 77–78

Situational control
, 51

Situational factors
, 51

Skepticism
, 134

“Slow down and enjoy ride” message of advertisement
, 287

Slow down stupid campaign
, 287

Slow down/don’t rush/allow time to drive slowly message of advertisement
, 287

Slow-mo campaign
, 286

Small marine survey and consultancy organization
, 235

Smoking
, 12

Snow-depth-catalyzed variation
, 123

Snow-depth-instrumented analysis
, 124

Social

and behavior change
, 291

body
, 29

change
, 135–137

cohesion
, 118

context
, 30–31

control
, 99

desirability
, 264

ecology
, 34–36

engagement
, 134–135

environment
, 30–32, 130

factor
, 97, 133

identity
, 29–30

images
, 54

media campaigns
, 288–291

nature
, 46

pain
, 29

phenomenon
, 120

psychological theories of persuasion
, 300

reaction path
, 46

stratification
, 262

symbolic behavior
, 136–137

system
, 98

theory
, 48

threat
, 278, 281

“Social and cultural” factors
, 262

Social Attitudes to Road Traffic Risk in Europe (SARTRE)
, 96–97

SARTRE 4 project
, 96

Social capital
, 118

actually improving traffic safety
, 121–124

affect traffic safety
, 119–121

effects
, 118

existing options and new approaches
, 125–126

trust
, 119

Social Exchange Theory
, 152–153, 163–164

Socialization
, 28–29, 98

Socio-demographic background factors
, 303–304

Socio-psychological constructs
, 98

Sociocultural factors
, 175

Solid communication process
, 200

Speed Cameras (advertisement)
, 285

Speed enforcement
, 284

Speed tolerances in Australia
, 283

Speeding
, 223, 230, 278–288, 302

Speeding: No one thinks big of you (advertisement)
, 286–287

Sportsmanship
, 158

Stakeholders
, 35, 179

State health departments
, 9

State-of-play with campaign evaluation
, 310–311

Statistical methods
, 304

Steel manufacturing organization
, 239–240

Step approach to Message Design and Testing (SatMDT)
, 297, 301

message (content)-related characteristics
, 305–310

pre-existing individual characteristics
, 302–304

Stereotype threat
, 304

Stewardship
, 160

Structural component
, 118–119

Structured participatory processes
, 132

Sudden braking
, 238

Superstitions
, 266–267

Supportive culture
, 152

Surveys
, 68

grouped items to themes and type
, 100–105

items to operational concept
, 98–99

Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
, 253

road safety targets
, 253–254

Sustained behavior
, 130

System hazard
, 130

Targets for road safety
, 253

“Technologies of domination”. See “Technologies of power”

“Technologies of power”
, 259

“Technologies of self”
, 259–260

Telematics
, 236, 238

Television
, 288

Text-messaging
, 56

Thematic analysis
, 227

Theories of persuasion and behavior change
, 300–301

Theorists’ Workshop model
, 301

Theory of action
, 42

Theory of planned behavior (TPB)
, 45–46, 57, 301

behavioral change interventions and
, 49–50

factors derived from
, 50

implicit and explicit attitudes
, 50

instrumental and emotional components of attitudes
, 50

normative elements
, 50–51

past behavior role
, 51–52

role of sanctions
, 51

situational factors and situational control
, 51

Third-party regulation
, 227

heavy vehicle fleets
, 229–231

light vehicle fleets
, 231–232

strategies
, 230, 234

Threats
, 278

appeal
, 306

appraisal
, 307

of diseases
, 4

in persuasion
, 305–306

threat-based messages, role of
, 306–307

“3 E’s” in road safety
, 377

360 degree feedback
, 246

Tollway operator
, 241

Top-down intervention
, 225

Toward Zero Deaths (TZD) National Strategy
, 6

Towards Zero campaign
, 290

Tracy (advertisement)
, 285

Trade-offs between safety and mobility
, 13–14

Traditional traffic safety approaches
, 224

Traffic

crashes
, 23–24, 222

fatalities
, 121

injuries
, 4–5

law enforcement operations
, 125–126

participants’ attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors
, 96–97

rules
, 96

Traffic safety
, 5, 23–24

complex environment
, 174–177

components
, 24

concerns
, 176

grassroots and global health contributions to
, 9–10

in LMICs
, 261–263

as politics
, 131

Traffic safety culture (TSC)
, 32–33, 42, 65, 96, 117–118, 202, 252, 262, 276, 299

analyzing
, 78

belief origins
, 26–29

belief systems
, 25–26, 27

crash factors
, 24–25

disentangling factors determining behavior
, 49–57

humanitarian crisis for LMICs
, 253

implications for practitioners
, 57, 269–270

implications for researchers
, 269–270

informing interventions to change beliefs and behaviors
, 85–88

interventions at level of compliance
, 58–59

interventions at level of identification
, 59

interventions at level of internalization
, 59–60

Kelman’s conceptual scheme
, 42–43

key components of combined model representing TSC
, 66

levels of attitudinal change
, 43–48

measuring
, 66

model predicting willingness and intention
, 255

potential methods
, 68–70

prevalence of beliefs and behaviors
, 79–82

principles
, 22–23

proposed model predicting willingness and intention
, 67

psychosocial approaches
, 254–258

question design
, 70–78

question development process
, 78

relationships between beliefs and behaviors
, 82–84

relative frequencies of beliefs about crash risk
, 71

social ecology
, 34–36

social environment
, 30–31

social identity
, 29–30

specific considerations for application of TSC to LMICs
, 266–269

systematic list of factors
, 57–58

theorizing
, 98

traffic safety
, 23–24

Traffic Safety Culture (TSC)-based program of strategies
, 87–89

transfer of HIC best practice in development agenda
, 253–254

variations among specific characteristics in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) context
, 258–266

vision for
, 6

Traffic-related behaviors
, 50

Transactional leadership
, 195–196

Transformation, participates in
, 200–201

Transformational leadership
, 196

behaviors
, 196

idealized influence
, 197

individualized consideration
, 198

inspirational motivation
, 197

intellectual stimulation
, 198

Transformative approach
, 286

Transforming
, 277, 285

approaches
, 281–282, 299

transforming-type approaches
, 279

Transition to governmentality
, 260

Translation
, 265

Transport(ation)
, 130

agency
, 138

carrier organization
, 242

and logistic organization
, 238

Transport Accident Commission (TAC)
, 280

Stop anti-drink driving advertisement of 2000
, 282

Transport services

company
, 235

organization
, 239

Trust
, 119, 122

Unfreezing stage
, 203–204

United Nations (UN) Decade of Action for Road Safety plan
, 253–254

United State (US), public health efforts in
, 7–9

Unlawful conduct
, 230

Urban fatal traffic incidents
, 124

Urbanization
, 134–135

Utility vehicle hire fleet
, 237

Validity
, 69

Values
, 27, 77–78, 267

Vehicle miles travel (VMT)
, 4

Vehicle simulation system
, 235

Vehicle tracking
, 236

VicRoads
, 281

Vision Zero
, 6, 55, 290

policy
, 48

Voice
, 160

Wear-out effects
, 289

Weick’s concept of heedfulness
, 48

Weigh options against criteria
, 141

Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic societies (WEIRD societies)
, 257

Western approach to religion
, 267

Western Australian “Chain of Responsibility” (CoR)
, 229–230

What’s your Plan B? campaign
, 282

Whistleblowing behaviors
, 160

Wicked problems
, 174–177, 181

Willingness
, 25–27, 53–54, 57, 71

Winners and Losers (advertisement)
, 281

Wipe off 5 campaign
, 286

Work-related drivers, risk factors for
, 223

Work-related road

deaths
, 222

safety
, 147

Workers’ perceptions of role-behavior expectancies
, 225

Workplace culture
, 238

Workplace Health and Safety regulations (WHS regulations)
, 227

Workplace road safety

benefits of road safety policies
, 241–244

case study focus distribution
, 228–229

enforcement
, 235

limitations
, 246–247

method
, 226–227

practical implications
, 245–247

prevention strategies
, 223–224

results
, 227–241

strategy hierarchy
, 230

See also Road safety advertising campaigns

World Health Organization (WHO)
, 5, 23, 146, 253, 302

Written account
, 265

Zero Deaths Highway Safety Strategy
, 174

“Zero tolerance” enforcement policy
, 125–126