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Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Social institutions
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Stopping the Carnage on African Roads - The Case of Ghana, Nigeria and South Africa (Paperback)
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Stopping the Carnage on African Roads - The Case of Ghana, Nigeria and South Africa (Paperback)
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More than 1.2 million people die in road traffic crashes every year
As many as 50 million people are injured or disabled by road
traffic crashes every year Road traffic crashes cost countries up
to 4% of their Gross National Product Correctly used seat-belts
reduce the risk of death in a crash by 61% Mandatory use of child
restraints can reduce child deaths by 35% Helmets reduce fatal and
serious head injuries by up to 45% Enforcing a drinking and driving
law around the world could reduce alcohol-related crashes by 20%
(WHO, 2005). According to the World Health Organization (WHO),
Africa has the world's highest rate of road fatalities per capita.
For example, the statistics indicate that 2,043 people perished in
road accidents in 2007 in Ghana alone compared to 1,858 people who
died in 2006. Many factors contribute to road accidents in Africa.
The notable ones include bribery and corruption. "While the focus
of this book is Ghana, Nigeria and South Africa, for obvious
reasons, nonetheless, Stopping the Carnage on African Roads is
unmistakably germane to the totality of the dismal traffic
situation in Africa at large. In this sense, the expansive title of
the book is all the more appropriate. In sum, on the critical
subject of preventable road carnage in Africa, Mr. Bonna is one,
among a dispiritingly low number of writers and intellectuals, who
knows exactly what he is talking about. In essence, the author's
argument revolves around the salutary, commonsensical and
imperative need for postcolonial African governments to ensure that
the auspicious facility of vehicular transportation is safely and
productively engaged. The latter observation, of course, implies
the stringent andimpartial enforcement of transit laws and
penalties." (Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., Ph.D., Bronx, New York).
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