并非所有的车祸都是平等的:建筑环境与自行车碰撞差异之间的联系

Jesus M. Barajas
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引用次数: 28

摘要

历史上的弱势群体在自行车事故中所占比例过高。先前的研究发现,黑人和西班牙裔骑自行车者以及非白人居民较多、收入中位数较低和高度贫困的地区比其他地区更容易发生自行车事故。虽然现有的研究已经探讨了社会经济地位和建筑环境在预测撞车频率中的作用,但很少有学者研究这些因素如何解释种族和民族之间的差异。利用旧金山湾区三年间7088起自行车事故的数据库,本研究考察了社会经济、交通和土地利用特征对旧金山湾区不同种族和民族之间自行车事故发生率差异的潜在影响。虽然高贫困和高土地利用密集度的地区总体上与更高数量的自行车事故有关,但交通量较低的街道和自行车基础设施并不影响涉及黑人和西班牙裔骑自行车者的撞车频率。在控制其他因素的情况下,黑人骑自行车者在贫穷的城市社区发生撞车事故的风险不成比例。这些发现引起了人们的注意,规划者需要考虑社会经济差异和社区层面的脆弱性如何在安全中发挥作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Not All Crashes Are Created Equal: Associations Between the Built Environment and Disparities in Bicycle Collisions
Historically disadvantaged populations are disproportionately represented in bicycle crashes. Previous research has found that Black and Hispanic bicyclists and areas with higher populations of non-White residents, lower median income, and high poverty experience bicycle crashes more frequently than others. Although existing research has explored the role of socioeconomic status and the built environment in predicting crash frequency, few scholars have studied how these factors account for disparities along racial and ethnic lines. Using a database of 7,088 bicycle crashes over a three-year period in the San Francisco Bay Area, this study examines the influence of socioeconomic, transportation, and land-use characteristics as potential causes of differences in bicycle crash occurrences among racial and ethnic groups in the San Francisco Bay Area. While areas of high poverty and high land-use intensity are associated with higher numbers of bicycle crashes overall, lower-traffic streets and bicycle infrastructure do not affect the frequency of crashes involving Black and Hispanic cyclists. Black bicyclists have a disproportionate risk of being involved in a crash in poor urban neighborhoods, controlling for other factors. These findings draw attention to the need for planners to consider how socioeconomic differences and vulnerability at the neighborhood level play a role in safety.
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