German English

______________

Save

Analyse Set

New Search

______________

Additional
catalogues

Subject search
as of 1946

Subject search
1501 - 1955

Reading room

______________

Just ask us

Library Account

Interlibrary
loan

Order digital copy

Book suggestion

______________

Privacy Policy

Barrierefreiheit

Impressum
(Imprint)

1 of 1
      
* results  search (Subject headings (XSP)) accidentes ferroviarios
 restrict (Basic classification (XBKL)) 55.30
Books
Title: 
Persons: 
Language/s: 
English
Publication statement: 
Baltimore, Maryland : Johns Hopkins University Press [2018], [2018]
Extent: 
xvi, 284 Seiten : Illustrationen, Tabellen, Diagramme, Karten ; 26 cm
Series: 
Note: 
Includes bibliographical references and index
ISBN: 
978-1-4214-2415-6 hardcover
1-421-42415-0 hardcover
Weitere Ausgaben: 978-1-4214-2416-3 electronic , 1-421-42416-9 electronic
Subject heading: 
Subject: 
Further documents: 
Library of Congress Classification: HE1780
Dewey Decimal Classification: [23] 363.12/2097309045
Regensburger Verbund-Klassifikation: ZO 5099
Abstract: 
"The history of American railroad safety divides into three overlapping periods. Down to roughly 1955, safety steadily improved. But as new competition arrived--cars, trucks, and airplanes--economic regulation precluded an effective response; after the mid-1950s profitability eroded and safety worsened. The focus of this book begins in 1965; the carriers were collapsing into bankruptcy and their safety eroding. Worker fatalities and grade crossing accidents increased, while train accidents skyrocketed leading to public outcry. In 1965 Congress responded with a new safety regime under the FRA and NTSB, and in 1970 it federalized all aspects of rail safety and instituted a massive grade crossing program. Despite new federal regulations, train accidents continued to increase, however. The third period begins about 1980. The carriers had been struggling to compete by providing better service and that required better safety. Aid came in 1971 as Amtrak took over money-losing passenger travel while partial economic deregulation occurred from 1976 to 1980. Freed to compete and with the funds and incentives to improve safety, the freight railroads have rapidly improved technology, cutting train and work accidents spectacularly. These were largely the result of private market incentives, for accidents were very expensive; regulation has mostly reinforced best practice. The main contributions of public policy have been support for research and development and funding for grade crossing safety. Thus, the thesis of this work is that it was not inadequate safety regulation but rather stifling economic regulation that had caused safety to collapse, while the turnaround after 1980 resulted not from tighter safety regulation but the return of more competitive railroading."--Provided by publisher
The long view: American railroad safety, 1828-1955 -- Off the tracks: the rise of train accidents, 1955-1978 -- On the right track: the long campaign train accidents, 1965-2015 -- A way of life: work safety in the modern era, 1955-2015 -- Passenger safety in modern times, 1955-2015 -- Look out for the train: motorists and trespassers, 1955-2015 -- Conclusion: back on track, railroad safety, 1965-2015
Further information: 
 
Shelf mark: 
1 B 180709
Location: 
Potsdamer Straße
 
 
 
Reference management: 
1 of 1
      
 
1 of 1