Why Africa cannot prosecute (or even educate) its way out of road accidents: insights from Ghana

Abstract The paper sheds light on the problem of the growing embracement of penal populism (fines and prison sentences) as a measure for dealing with road trauma in Africa through a case study of Ghana. It argues that the policy of hunting for rogue drivers to make roads safer in the continent is as...

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Main Author: Festival Godwin Boateng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2021-01-01
Series:Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-020-00695-5
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spelling doaj-a62ec7b02bc34bf7a5a46b6851c017152021-01-17T12:05:45ZengSpringer NatureHumanities & Social Sciences Communications2662-99922021-01-018111110.1057/s41599-020-00695-5Why Africa cannot prosecute (or even educate) its way out of road accidents: insights from GhanaFestival Godwin Boateng0Center for Sustainable Urban Development (CSUD), The Earth Institute—Columbia UniversityAbstract The paper sheds light on the problem of the growing embracement of penal populism (fines and prison sentences) as a measure for dealing with road trauma in Africa through a case study of Ghana. It argues that the policy of hunting for rogue drivers to make roads safer in the continent is as ineffective as killing mosquitoes one by one to control malaria. The best remedy is to drain the swamps in which they breed. The swamps, in respect of road trauma in Africa, are the ineffective public transportation systems and the focus on constructing more expensive roads, which encourage the importation of more old cars, and a high dependence on privately run, deregulated commercial passenger transport sectors that are structurally embedded in driver exploitation. These factors coupled with police corruption and the traffic congestions induced by private capital-driven land-use patterns are what underlie safety-adverse driving and road transport problems generally in the continent. More fundamentally, the paper argues that the law enforcement-heavy approach to road trauma essentializes African drivers as having a danger-prone driving culture. This generates (in)discipline concerns that act as a red herring by deflecting attention from the structural factors undermining road safety in the continent: the continuing effects of neoliberal programs funded by international development bodies, and the profiteering and political interests of powerful coalitions of private transport owners’ unions and public officials that have molded and entrenched the continent’s road transport sectors in its present problematic forms to serve particular purposes. The paper hopes to move road safety conversations in Africa away from the present thinking that enforcing greater punishments against drivers, rather than addressing the broader societal systems whose effects manifest in the road transport sector, is “the” answer to the unacceptably high rate of carnages on the continent’s roads.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-020-00695-5
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Festival Godwin Boateng
spellingShingle Festival Godwin Boateng
Why Africa cannot prosecute (or even educate) its way out of road accidents: insights from Ghana
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
author_facet Festival Godwin Boateng
author_sort Festival Godwin Boateng
title Why Africa cannot prosecute (or even educate) its way out of road accidents: insights from Ghana
title_short Why Africa cannot prosecute (or even educate) its way out of road accidents: insights from Ghana
title_full Why Africa cannot prosecute (or even educate) its way out of road accidents: insights from Ghana
title_fullStr Why Africa cannot prosecute (or even educate) its way out of road accidents: insights from Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Why Africa cannot prosecute (or even educate) its way out of road accidents: insights from Ghana
title_sort why africa cannot prosecute (or even educate) its way out of road accidents: insights from ghana
publisher Springer Nature
series Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
issn 2662-9992
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract The paper sheds light on the problem of the growing embracement of penal populism (fines and prison sentences) as a measure for dealing with road trauma in Africa through a case study of Ghana. It argues that the policy of hunting for rogue drivers to make roads safer in the continent is as ineffective as killing mosquitoes one by one to control malaria. The best remedy is to drain the swamps in which they breed. The swamps, in respect of road trauma in Africa, are the ineffective public transportation systems and the focus on constructing more expensive roads, which encourage the importation of more old cars, and a high dependence on privately run, deregulated commercial passenger transport sectors that are structurally embedded in driver exploitation. These factors coupled with police corruption and the traffic congestions induced by private capital-driven land-use patterns are what underlie safety-adverse driving and road transport problems generally in the continent. More fundamentally, the paper argues that the law enforcement-heavy approach to road trauma essentializes African drivers as having a danger-prone driving culture. This generates (in)discipline concerns that act as a red herring by deflecting attention from the structural factors undermining road safety in the continent: the continuing effects of neoliberal programs funded by international development bodies, and the profiteering and political interests of powerful coalitions of private transport owners’ unions and public officials that have molded and entrenched the continent’s road transport sectors in its present problematic forms to serve particular purposes. The paper hopes to move road safety conversations in Africa away from the present thinking that enforcing greater punishments against drivers, rather than addressing the broader societal systems whose effects manifest in the road transport sector, is “the” answer to the unacceptably high rate of carnages on the continent’s roads.
url https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-020-00695-5
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