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Killed by a Traffic Engineer : Shattering the Delusion That Science Underlies Our Transportation System

Killed by a Traffic Engineer : Shattering the Delusion That Science Underlies Our Transportation System

by Princeton University Press

£30.00
MPN9781642833300
Prices updated 21 May 2026

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In the US we are nearing four million road deaths since we began counting them in 1899.The numbers are getting worsein recent years, yet we continue to accept these deaths as part of doing business.There has been no examination of whywe engineer roads that are literally killing us. Fixing the carnage on our roads requires a change in mindset and a dramatic transformation of transportation.Thisgoes for traffic engineers in particular because they are still the ones in charge of our streets. In Killed by a Traffic Engineer, civil engineering professor Wes Marshall shines a spotlight on how little science there isbehind the way that our streets are engineered, which leaves safety as an afterthought.While traffic engineers are nottrying to cause deliberate harm to anyone, he explains, they are guilty of creating a transportation system whose designsremain largely based on plausible, but unproven, conjecture. Thoroughly researched and compellingly written, Killed by a Traffic Engineer shows how traffic engineering “research” isoutdated and unexamined (at its best) and often steered by an industry and culture considering only how to get frompoint A to B the fastest way possible, to the detriment of safety, quality of life, equality, and planetary health.Marshallexamines our need for speed and how traffic engineers disconnected it from safety, the focus on capacity and how itinfluences design, blaming human error, relying on faulty data, how liability drives reporting, measuring road safetyoutcomes, and the education (and reeducation) of traffic engineers. Killed by a Traffic Engineer is ultimately hopeful about what is possible once we shift our thinking and demand streetsengineered for the safety of people, both outside and inside of cars.It will make you look at your city and streets (andtraffic engineers) in a new light and inspire you to take action.

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