Can speeding be justified?
By: Sarah Redshaw
Date: Tuesday, 12. June 2007
Please Note: This article was also posted in the Global Web Conference
on Aggressive Driving Issues as one of the seven conference
papers. It is also available in PDF
and Word formats.
There is a lot of community acceptance of speeding and the kinds of justifications
that are given centre around people regarding themselves as good enough drivers
to decide what speed to travel at for themselves. There is an evident lack
of acceptance of speed limits. It seems that no matter how much better roads
are and with speed limits up to 110 km per hour, there remains a strong desire
to exceed speed limits. The level of acceptance of speeding is fairly widespread
and besides the problems this causes amongst experienced drivers it sets a
very bad example to young drivers. Many drivers of all ages experience being
'pushed along' in traffic above what they are comfortable with, which is typically
exceeding speed limits. Many drivers exhibit a great deal of impatience with
drivers travelling at or near the speed limit and can become quite aggressive.
On highways where there are 60 km/h zones these are often ignored by drivers
who either fail to notice what speed they are doing and the change in acceptable
speed limit, or simply choose to ignore speed limits in these areas. This paper
explores the culture of speeding that appears to be an implicit part of acceptable
driving practice.
I have been examining a lot of the literature and research on driving attitudes,
young drivers, and speeding and the more I looked at it the more I realised
there was a gender issue operating that is important and needs to be discussed.
The way we drive is influenced by a culture or cultures around driving and
these tend to be male dominated. The kinds of cultural influences operating
in male attitudes to driving and the enforcement of rules encompass beliefs
and ideals as well as the kinds of actions that will be determined by these.
While it may appear to be great fun to express one's individuality as a person
through cars and driving, the roads are not an appropriate place to do it.
The needs and functions of driving have changed, there are more cars on the
road and drivers with varied needs and interests as drivers, yet male ideals
of driving remain dominant. Expressing oneself through the kind of car one
has is one thing, but expressing it in the way one drives is not really a luxury
we can afford.
This paper will discuss some of the cultural aspects of driving by looking
at attitudes as they are reported in a number of forms. One form is research
reports and statistics, another is qualitative studies and discussion papers,
and finally there are newspaper letters to the editor (not to mention advertising
and magazines which I will not deal with here). I will examine a few of these
as exemplifying certain community reactions to policing of speeding.
Male attitudes to driving, passed down from father to son can be detrimental
for purely economic and strategic reasons-there is a lot more traffic to deal
with and social environments need to be protected. Consequently, there are
a range of necessary limits to where cars can be treated in certain ways. Men
have different attitudes and purposes around driving (Walker, 1996; Rothe,
1994) and while these are not necessarily wrong they certainly need to be put
into perspective. Many men like cars and driving, and many driver-centred initiatives
have consequently moulded our environment. Driver-centred means that roads
tend to carve their way through our lives with priority expected if not given,
to the needs of drivers. Young male drivers are to some extent casualties of
a masculine dominated culture in driving.
A survey
The 1999 Community Attitudes Survey shows that 87% of the population surveyed
(a total of 1600) agree that speed limits are generally set at reasonable levels-50%
even strongly agree; and yet 82% of males and 72% of females speed at least
sometimes. Only 35% consider speed to be the most important factor contributing
to crashes and 58% mention it when nominating 3 causes of crashes. 65% of males
and 47% of females consider fines for speeding as revenue raising and 39% of
males and 27% of females consider it okay to exceed the speed limit if they
are driving safely.
While 49% of females support strict enforcement of the 60 km/h speed limit,
only 39% of males do, and in 100 km/h zones, 44% of females but only 25% of
males support strict enforcement. 52% consider doing 5 kms or more over the
speed limit acceptable in a 60 km/h zone and 64% tolerate 5 kms or more above
the speed limit in a 100 km/h zone-10% at 115 km/h or more.
After a crack down on speeding over the December/January break in 1998/99
a number of letters appeared in the Sydney Morning Herald, many of which complained
about the increased police presence and fines for speeding. There have been
complaints of this kind for a number of years and it is interesting to note
that no matter how much roads have been improved and speed limits increased,
it is never enough. Many expect to travel faster. There are many consequences
of speeding which drivers fail to accept due to an underlying acceptance of
the need and right to speed.
To a great extent authorities have tried to cater to the demands of motorists
and this has included creating opportunities for higher speeds-motorways and
highway upgradings and so on. Nevertheless police and other authorities are
accused of opportunism when it comes to policing speed limits.
It is clear that men are more likely to speed than women, though that is changing,
particularly amongst younger women, and the culture of driving has been dominated
by a masculine culture of pushing the limits and risk taking. This has grave
consequences for the public in general, but particularly for younger drivers
who then take on the same attitudes about speeding.
There is also a strong denial of the consequences of speeding with many feeling
that they are sufficiently skilled drivers to handle the vehicle and whatever
conditions might present themselves. It is becoming more and more evident,
however, that it is not just skill that matters.
A good driver
What is a good driver? Often this is based on level of skill, and males tend
to see themselves as far superior in handling motor vehicles than females.
Young males will typically make derogatory comments about female drivers, just
as they did in the 1950s (RTA 2000), despite the fact that many more women
do drive and women have a better safety record-fewer deaths and hospital admissions
(FORS, 1998a), fewer violations and less risky driving (FORS, 1998b). The fact
that women do have a better safety record appears to only encourage the idea
that women are inferior which indicates that good driving is strongly equated
with riskier practices for men-pushing the vehicle to its limits and being
able to handle it, getting ahead of the traffic, being in front, and so on.
Women are generally more content with taking their time to get where they need
to go, and less concerned about demonstrating the virtues of the vehicle or
their driving skills.
Young women drivers are not becoming the same as young men, however, they
are becoming more aggressive. They don't want to show off their vehicle or
their skills but they do feel they have to be aggressive to get where they
want to go and are often in a hurry. It is of course not really possible to
do straight comparisons between men and women since the variations between
men as drivers and between women as drivers are at least as profound, if not
more profound, but it is tempting to do so when there is so much rhetoric against
women drivers. It is tempting to try to show without a doubt that where women
might be certain kinds of drivers, men are another.
The main point I want to draw from this is that there is an emphasis, in motoring
discourse at least, on the kinds of things that men tend to want, like cracking
down on drivers guilty of 'lingering in the overtaking lane' instead of, as
one motorist put it in a letter to the SMH's Motoring editor Peter McKay; 'meaningless
Speed Kills campaigns ... why can't the RTA air commercials to combat incompetent
driving?' (Mixed Grille Column, Saturday, January 30, 1999, p.81). What the
letter writer considers 'incompetent driving' could be anyone who gets in his
way, and there is an obvious preference for the right to speed being expressed
over the need for caution and patience.
Letters to the editor of the Sydney Morning Herald in January 1999 reflect
a level of community acceptance of speeding. These indicate that there is a
great deal of objection to police targeting speeding as a major cause of road
deaths. I will outline here the sorts of objections raised, the areas where
the writers think the blame should be placed (rather than speeding), and the
sorts of strategies and justifications used to defend speeding.
The apparent 'good sense' implied in these letters indicates that the writers,
all of whom are male, consider many in the community would agree with them,
share their objection, and that what they are arguing does make 'good sense'.
The fact that the paper has published them indicates that the editor regards
them as reflecting a significant community sentiment or at least a popular
controversial issue.
There are many reasons to think that there is a high level of community acceptance
of speeding as a reasonable thing for 'responsible drivers' under 'the right
circumstances', which generally means men. People say it in conversation fairly
regularly and these writers offer a few reasonably well accepted arguments
in defense of speeding. The less well thought out aspects of driving rules
are those which most need to be talked about and considered. The main ones
are a lack of awareness of the reasons for speed limits and the implied right
that individuals, particularly males, should be able to decide for themselves
what the limits should be.
The titles of the pieces themselves show the sentiment reflected; 'Speed not
the worst killer on the road' and 'No such thing as one safe speed'. Speeding
is clearly being defended in these titles as well as in the contents of the
letters. The second title is more subtle in that one needs to read the relevant
letter to see what it actually means (I did anyway, but I suspect some would
know immediately). It also plays on the campaign, 'Safe speeding, there's no
such thing'. A subtle change of words makes the change almost unnoticeable
at first. What it means is that the speed limits themselves imply a 'safe speed',
but because conditions, circumstances and driving ability vary they could not
possibly be appropriate. Since the reason for having a speed limit is precisely
because conditions, circumstances and driving ability vary, the claim can only
be read as a justification for being able to decide the speed one wishes to
travel at for oneself, which you can do, but only up to the point marked on
the sign.
Speed limits seem to be taken as the minimum rather than the maximum appropriate
speed. The annoyance exhibited by many drivers when anyone drives below the
speed limit is a clear indication that there is a high expectation that people
will at least travel as fast as the speed limit, certainly not less than it.
Perhaps this indicates that the purposes and forms of speed limit signs ought
to be reassessed.
The police, the RTA (Roads and Traffic Authority), and the Minister come under
a lot of fire from most of these writers. Interestingly they are the authorities,
the ones who institute the regulations which are both being called for and
criticised in these letters. What is being called for is more policing of drug
and alcohol use, better driver education, road maintenance, and roadworthy
checks on vehicles. What is being criticised is policing of speed limits. This
is a bit like the stereotyping of the bad driver that Eddie Butler-Bowden talks
about in his paper 'Road Hogs to Road Rage' (1998, p.66-83). The problem driver
is always someone else who does something that is really bad compared to what
the average driver does-take drugs, drink and drive etc.-while the average
driver merely speeds.
Butler-Bowden states; 'According to popular lore, there are two fundamentally
different types of bad driver-the inept and the dangerous-and virtually all
driver stereotypes fit into one or other of these stereotypes. Examples of
the inept include old men wearing hats, Volvo drivers, so-called "ethnics",
caravaners, old ladies off to play bowls, "housewives" and, in fact, any woman.
Examples of the dangerous include young hoons, taxi drivers and "truckies"'
(1998, p.68). Who is left?-men of various ages driving various kinds of cars,
who incidentally have been the ones making all the rules and influencing what
happens on the road up until at least the 1980s. Typically, it seems what is
desired is to have the rules apply to everyone else but not to themselves.
The letters
The first letter I will examine is under the heading 'Speed not the worst
killer on the road', which notes that the road toll in the Northern Territory
over the holiday break was zero. There are no speed limits on many roads in
the territory which seems a significant point to the writer in quoting the
statistic, although he makes no allowance for the fact that the territory has
a lower population and per capita generally has one of the highest road tolls
in the country. He goes on to say that 'this news will certainly not improve
the attitude of drivers in the region who receive a letter in the mail telling
them that they were selected by the police radar speed-trapping lotto to contribute
to the State road tax'.
The region being referred to is unclear-either it is the Northern Territory
where they are fining people for speeding where there is no speed limit-the
implication here is that speeding fines are irrational and irrationally doled
out; or it is the NSW region, in which case the implication is that if there
were no speed limit the roads would be safer and we wouldn't be getting 'arbitrarily'
fined.
The 'attitude' which will not improve is also unclear. It could be the attitude
that one should not be fined for merely speeding or it could be the attitude
itself that speeding is okay. There is an underlying acceptance or at least
acknowledgement in the ambiguity: the attitude that speeding is okay is both
acceptable and therefore not to be disciplined, and unacceptable. If the attitude
being referred to is the attitude that speeding is okay then why would it need
improving if it were not also a questionable attitude? If the attitude is that
being fined for speeding is a ridiculous waste of time, money and resources,
which the rest of the letter supports, then there is tacit support for the
idea that speeding is okay.
The writer goes on to state four factors causing road deaths and to claim
that speeding is a cause only in 'highly selective cases'. What the 'highly
selective cases' are is not outlined and so it is left to be inferred from
what else is said. The writer regards alcohol and drug use as the real problems
and accuses police of not tackling these enough-'I would like to know why the
police have given up on serious testing for drink drivers'. As the writer states,
his concern here is related to his recent personal experience of an 'alcohol-related
road death'. What the writer sees as insufficient police checks on the use
of marijuana and the wearing of seat belts then becomes the subject of discussion.
The police are described by this writer as 'lazy', 'taking the easy way out'
with their 'random mass-culling approach'. He objects to speed traps but states
that if police must continue with them then they should patrol the roads and
face drivers 'to tell them they have offended'. The latter idea involves the
implication that the police are hiding from the public because their fines
are unreasonable and they don't want to give drivers the opportunity to argue
with them.
The writer clearly regards speeding as the least significant factor in road
deaths and ends his letter with a threat to the government; 'the March election
is on its way and ... responsible drivers are voters too'. Responsible drivers
are not defined but rather implied here. The implication is that there are
drivers who are 'responsible' enough to speed when they think it is appropriate
and they should not be fined for doing so.
The second letter under this heading laments that 'Nothing has changed. ...
the same tired old rhetoric' is being trotted out and that police are 'holding
drivers culpable'. He demands that 'policing methods' change from 'reactive'
to proactive' and that the police 'come out from behind the bushes'. The final
line, 'The policeman you can see on the highway is a greater deterrent than
the one you can't', suggests that the writer agrees with the need for policing,
however this appears to contradict the complaint that police are 'holding drivers
culpable'. While the last line appears to consider police presence a good thing
the rest of the letter is an attack and complaint against the police.
Amongst the letters under the heading 'No such thing as one safe speed' there
is one which clearly agrees with the campaign against speeding. The writers
state that the campaign will result in drivers slowing down and that speed
does affect the severity of injury. The letter is finished off in favour of
fines as revenue raising which 'helps to pay for the hospital care of those
already injured on the roads and, in the process, it might even save some lives'.
This letter, co-written by a woman and a man, looks at the broader implications
of speeding-not just road deaths, but road casualties as well. It reflects
acceptance of the speed regulations and regards this as common sense. To show
how obvious it is that speed causes more severe injury in accidents they recommend
to sceptics that they close their front door and then 'walk into it, then take
a few steps back and run into it ....' . This 'small experiment' has the effect
of making the point obvious, simple, down to earth, and indisputable.
Of the three remaining letters under this heading, two again dispute the need
to police speed limits and the appropriateness or 'arbitrariness' of speed
limits and the third is from the NSW Minister for Transport Carl Scully, defending
the need and record of the government in dealing with road safety issues. The
Minister reinforces the part that speed plays in road fatalities, stating that
'it was a factor in 40% of fatalities in 1998'. He then goes on to highlight
police operations in regard to the use of marked cars, random breath testing,
and drug-driving laws.
The other letters state their agreement with the previous letters that have
been analysed here and which were published a few days previous to these. In
the first, speed cameras are referred to as 'remunerative' and the adage 'speed
kills' is strongly disputed. 'Otherwise', it is stated, 'we would go back to
the days of the little man with a flag walking in front of vehicles'. Here
the writer is resorting to extremism to defend speeding and express indignation
at being fined for merely speeding when other drivers are doing much worse
things.
Other research
It is interesting to note the amount of research cited by Peter Rothe (1994)
which tries to establish the value (or lack) of enforcement and fines in an
effort to argue, it seems, that speed should not be regulated to the extent
that it is. Research (carried out overwhelmingly by males) which takes this
view misses the point that we only have the convenience of independent road
travel by having some standardised agreement as to how it should most effectively
operate, and focuses primarily on road travel as if the rest of the social
environment was inconsequential.
Rothe fails to discuss the problem of the differences between drivers, and
within drivers at different times, and more importantly, the consequences for
the social environments within which car travel occurs. When he focuses on
research which concludes that speed variance is a greater problem for safety
than high speed as such, he does not consider the possible reasons for speed
variance-drivers not familiar with the road, preparing to turn, differences
in confidence level of drivers, drivers looking for something such as a parking
space and so on. It cannot be assumed that driving occurs on lonely highways
with a standard driver in a standard state of consciousness (who would of course
be male) when most of it involves complex social environments with varying
conditions according to driver's varying needs.
A paper given by Jeff Quayle given at the Road Safety Conference held in Canberra
in 1999 also argues quite strongly for more flexibility on speed. The paper
is titled 'Hit by Friendly Fire: Collateral Damage in the War Against Speed'
which in itself implies a number of things. Firstly that there is a war on
and secondly that there is tacit agreement amongst those on both sides that
it is or should be, okay for some to speed. Quayle makes some important points
about where speed limits should be reviewed but there is a definite intention
in his argument to support the idea that speeding is okay for some drivers.
Quayle's main complaint is; 'The fundamental weakness of the mass enforcement
of speed limits is that the aim of distinguishing the safe from the unsafe
drivers is simply ignored'(489). How do we distinguish safe from unsafe drivers?
It comes back to the unsafe being everybody except those like oneself, as surveys
in a number of places have shown. It is men who are more likely to speed and
to see themselves as having the right to choose to speed and increasingly women
are following suit-the average driver often does not seem to count what they
do as problematic and so will justify or not notice their level of speed, tailgating
and so on, considering it appropriate due to the ineptitude of all the other
drivers.
Conclusions
There have been too many grey areas in road safety due to a particular kind
of culture that has moved from the view that driving is a very difficult, complex
task that only specially able people are able to really manage, to mass licensing
and car ownership, where it is commonly regarded as something anyone can do,
but men can do it better. Driving was extremely male dominated for at least
the first half of the century and men regarded themselves as superior and therefore
more capable of driving than women (and anyone else they wanted to exclude
such as various groups of immigrants). In the last few decades more and more
women have taken on driving and now equal numbers of males and females choose
to get their licenses. With the previous attitudes however, there has grown
the dominance of male centred views-pushing the limits, taking risks and so
on, as what driving is all about.
Certainly it is not the case that all men are aggressive drivers but men on
the whole have dominated driving culture and seen it as their domain. They
have wanted to push for faster cars and roads, and to decide to what extent
they can stretch the rules. The 'good' driver seems clearly to be male and
to be related more to the needs and desires of male drivers than female drivers.
This is important in beginning to tackle the major cultural acceptance of bending
the rules, as exemplified in the example of speeding. The speeding driver who
feels he can speed because he is a good driver considers that others should
move out of his way and make life easier for him.
Women taking the kids to school are assumed to be bad drivers because they
take their time or are a bit more cautious about turning. They are likely to
be thinking about the kids and don't 'get out of the way' quickly enough. Likewise,
however, men and women commuters are likely to be thinking about work and pushing
to get there as fast as they can. No one is more preoccupied or a worse driver
than everyone else because of that. We are all less cautious at times when
driving than we should be. That includes those who consider themselves the
best drivers.
While those who regard themselves as 'good', 'safe' drivers would like to
find ways to legalise their own practices they typically wish to exclude those
who do not participate according to their standards. This is enough reason
to maintain that driving should and must be regulated, including speed, and
this will continue to be the case to an even greater extent in the future.
Regulations in an area such as driving help to ensure that most have access
to the opportunities that driving offers and that it does not merely favour
one group at the expense of others.
Looking at ways to bring about greater community acceptance of the need for
regulations is where our energy should be spent rather than establishing that
some drivers are more competent than others and should therefore be in a position
to make their own rules. Naturally regulations need to be reviewed and discussed
but they also need to be considered in terms of the opportunities and advantages
they create, such as facilitation of traffic flow and safety in a complex and
varied context. How we as a society approach driving affects how young drivers
take to the roads. There are many cultural ideals which contribute to the driving
experience and which need to be examined by younger and more experienced drivers
alike.
Stephen McCartney:
I read Sarah Redshaw's article with interest, but I felt that she was too ready
to dismiss a view of driving that is quite valid....
Robert A. Leigh:
It's all down to habituation. Post a speed limit and enforce it consistently
and fairly, and you'll get compliance. If an area can safely support a higher
speed, but limit has been....
References
Australian Transport Safety Bureau (1999) Community Attitudes to Road Safety:
Community Attitudes Survey, Wave 12, 1999.
Butler-Bowden, Eddie (1998) 'Road Hogs to Road Rage', in Cars and Culture:
Our Driving Passions , edited by Charles Pickett, Sydney: Powerhouse Publishing
and HarperCollins, p.66-83.
RTA (2000) Roads and Traffic Authority of NSW, Youth Road Safety in NSW: A
Discussion Paper.
FORS (1998a) A. Dobson, W.J. Brown & J. Ball, Women Behind the Wheel:
Driver Behaviour and Road Crash Involvement, CR179.
FORS (1998b) R. Over, Women behind the Wheel: A Review of Literature Relating
to Male and Female Drivers, CR177.
Rothe, Peter (1991) Rethinking Young Drivers. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers.
Rothe, Peter (1994) Beyond Traffic Safety. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers,
pp.96-103.
Walker, L. (1996) "Under the Bonnet: young men, car-culture and male bonding." A
paper presented to the Masculinities and Society Conference, Newcastle 6th
November.
Walker, L (1998a) "Chivalrous Masculinity among Juvenile Offenders in Western
Sydney: A New Perspective on Young Working Class Men and Crime," Current Issues
in Criminal Justice, March, Vol 9, No 3, pp.279-293.
Walker, L. (1998b) "Under the Bonnet: Working class masculinity and the exclusion
of women." Australian Masculinities. Special issue of Journal of Interdisciplinary
Gender Studies, December, 1998.
Walker, L. (n.d.) "Masculinity Motor Vehicles and Government Intervention:
An ethnographic and case study analysis of working class male youth in Western
Sydney." Canberra. Federal Office of Road Safety. In Progress.
Further comments to this article have been disabled.
Showing 1 - 3 comments
Jesse,
WOW... how to take sexist biggotry to a road safety debate...
I'd say stereotypes are there for a reason, having been crashed into by "ethnics" and "soccer mums" who either didn't know the rules or were understandably distracted with their children. I've also been knocked of my motorbike by a 90 year old guy in a white corolla with a bowling hat.... he was inattentive and unable to turn his head to check his blind spot as he pulled out.
Stereotypes are generally established for a reason... and often people have a justified reason for falling into them... being aware of these people and accomodating them by being more cautious around them isn't nearly as derogatory as to assume that anyone who is unwilling to stray from their convictions in this matter is somehow a testosterone fuelled feind as you spent so much of your paper trying to convey.
I'm disappointed, more than anything, in your seeming resistance to examine whether the points raised were valid, rather than picking apart the authors grammar and perfect logic... perhaps had you not been so reluctant you might have asked whether screaming children might prevent a mother from providing required concentration to the road? or that, as the victorian police force believe (http://www.caradvice.com.au/11828/police-agree-speed-cameras-are-for-revenue-raising/) the approach being taken toward speeding is not about road safety as the NSW minister claimed.
It would be interesting to see whether you could justify the limits imposed and the methods and locations utilised by the police? In my opinion if the limits aren't there for safety then it's fairly easy to justify why they needn't be adhered to....
of course... driving too fast for conditions, which is an actual accident cause, cannot be justified at all.... but that's different to "speeding".
rbl,
This paper seems mainly informed by the authors opinions, particularly her opinion of men. For what it's worth, Australian speed limits have remained much the same since the 1930s, increasing by only 5km/h when the metric system was introduced. Meanwhile, roads have improved and technology is vastly different. Australia has some of the slowest speed limits in the world. Is it any wonder many drivers, both women and men, are dissatisfied?
Speed has been shown to be a factor primarily when it is excessive for local conditions (such as reduced visibility or traction), not in excess of posted limits. However, the author has ignored this in an attempt to push her agenda.
Rick,
Speeding is justified if you are passing a slow ass driver in the left lane.