Teens and traffic safety

Author/s: 
Thomas Dee, William N. Evans
Year of Publication: 
2001
Editor/s: 
In J.Gruber (Ed)
Publication: 
An Economic Analysis of Risky Behavior Among Youths
Publisher: 
University of Chicago Press

Hollywood has always portrayed teens and cars as a volatile mixture. Whether it was the game of chicken from Rebel without a Cause, the drag race in American Graffiti, or the misadventures with dad’s car in Risky Business and Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, a teen behind the wheel of a car has always moved the plot along to some calamitous event. Although movies are sometimes a poor barometer of what ails society, unfortunately in this case these depictions may not be too far from the truth. In 1997 alone, there were 10,208 motor-vehicle fatalities among young adults aged fifteen to twenty-four, accounting for roughly one-third of all deaths in this age group. Motor-vehicle fatalities are far and away the leading cause of death among young adults.

APA Citation

Dee, T., & Evans, W.N. (2001). Teens and traffic safety. In J.Gruber (Ed), An Economic Analysis of Risky Behavior Among Youths. University of Chicago Press.