TY - JOUR PY - 2019// TI - Community perceptions and misconceptions of motorcycle accident risks in the Upper West Region of Ghana JO - Travel behaviour and society A1 - Konkor, Irenius A1 - Kansanga, Moses A1 - Sano, Yujiro A1 - Antabe, Roger A1 - Luginaah, Isaac SP - 157 EP - 165 VL - 15 IS - N2 - The Ghana National Road Safety Commission indicates that over 2,200 people were involved in motorcycle accidents (MCAs) nationwide in 2016 partly due to the increased usage of motorcycles for commercial and private purposes. Several studies on the causes of MCAs in Ghana however, have focused on rational factors such as over speeding, drunk riding, fatigue, age and gender. What is less understood is the role of sociocultural construction of risk and community perceptions about MCAs. Using a mixed methods approach involving surveys and focus group discussions, this paper examines community perceptions of MCAs in the Upper West Region (UWR) of Ghana.

FINDINGS show that sociocultural misconceptions of accidents as outcomes of supernatural causes (OR = 1.41, P < 0.1) significantly contribute to the increased incidence of MCAs in the UWR. These sociocultural constructions seem to supersede critical explanatory factors of accidents such as alcohol consumption (OR = 1.91, P < 0.01) and over speeding (OR = 1.48, P < 0.05) in the context of poor road infrastructure. Apart from focusing on road traffic regulations and infrastructural development, this paper calls for the need to incorporate a sociocultural dimension into ongoing road safety programs to minimise these deeply rooted culturally-motivated misconceptions and attributions of MCAs to supernatural causes.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 2214-367X UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tbs.2019.03.001 ID - ref1 ER -