Teamwork and Technology Transfer in Low-Volume Road Safety

Author:

Kagoro Chobya Light A.1,Eck Ronald W.2,Wyant William D.3

Affiliation:

1. National Construction Council, Mansfield Street, P.O. Box 70039, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, West Virginia University, P.O. Box 6103, Morgantown, WV 26506-6103

3. Department of Community Medicine, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26506

Abstract

The roles of teams and technology transfer in enhancing safety on low-volume roads are addressed. Roadway safety is a multidisciplinary science involving several elements: ( a) the three components of the roadway system—people, vehicle, and roadway; ( b) the agencies and groups that plan, design, build, and use roads and promote roadway safety; and ( c) the public health and safety communities that are concerned with injury prevention, response, treatment, and rehabilitation. Often the people working within these separate elements are characterized by interests, methods, and means limited by the boundaries, real or perceived, of their disciplines, organizations, and cultures. The application of technology transfer and teamwork enhances the efficacy of efforts to focus these elements on issues and problems related to roadway safety. Three broad topics are discussed. First, the importance of integrating the efforts of technical and nontechnical people and organizations through the development and management of multidisciplinary working groups and teams is explained. An associated topic is the conflict and ambiguity expected with expertise roles, boundary roles, and culture. Second, the importance of technology transfer in establishing and maintaining roadway systems used by motor vehicles, nonmotorized vehicles, and pedestrians and in educating and training engineers, engineering technicians, and the general population to design, build, maintain, and use roads safely is highlighted. Third, the importance of existing agencies in providing an organizational infrastructure that may either facilitate or hinder roadway safety planning and operations is described.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference29 articles.

1. ChobyaL. A. K. Highway Safety Management Systems for Developing Nations. M. S. thesis. West Virginia University, Morgantown, 1997.

2. The potential for road accident reduction in developing countries

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