Jean-Pascal Assailly, Julien Cestac
Drunk driving prevention and cultural influences
Číslo: 2/2018
Periodikum: Transactions on Transport Sciences
DOI: 10.5507/tots.2018.010
Klíčová slova: Alcohol; culture; young people; drinking and driving; risk perception; norms
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We used data from the SAFE ROADS 4 YOUTH (SR4Y) project, with the objective to implement and evaluate drink driving prevention actions using a common conceptual framework in three developing countries over three continents: Vietnam, South Africa and Argentina. 11300 students aged between 13 and 25 were surveyed.
We conducted a regression analysis of social norms on the intention to resist to drunk driving in each country. In all three countries, family injunctive norms were correlated with drunk-driving (DD) intention. The link was strongest in Argentina and weakest in South Africa. In South Africa, friends' injunctive norms had negligible link with DD intention, no link was found with friends' descriptive norms. The link between injunctive norms and DD intention was stronger in Vietnam than in Argentina. Friends' descriptive norms had stronger link with DD in Argentina than in Vietnam.
Overall these results suggest differences in social influence on drunk driving intention depending on national cultures.